Here begin the chronicles of my engine head disassembly and reassembly.
Pulling things apartSo I sat down (on the floor) to see what I needed to do. With both the MX-5 and Familia heads in front of me, I began work. Firstly, I wanted to give spectral's custom valve spring compressor tool a try so that I could remove some valves. Unfortunately, the 2cm slot he cut in the tool wasn't long enough - unexpectedly, it was far from long enough. With pliers, a file and a saw (and no vice - gah), I managed to hack at the tube and extend the length of the slot to span half the length of the tube.
Because the cylinder that the melted valve was in (number 3) must have become pretty hot, I decided that replacing both exhaust valves in cylinder 3 would be the way to go. I grabbed the valve spring compressor and attached it to the head. It hooked in and was compressing the valve nicely - and with it I managed to wind the spring down enough to expose the collet. It took a fair bit of turning, but I eventually managed to do it. This method is a bit of a pain because you have to mount the compressor, wind it down, dislodge the collets, retrieve the collets and then wind it all back up again. So, on suggestion of my girlfriend's dad, I got out a spark plug socket, short extension and a hammer. I removed the hydraulic lifters, put the spark plug socket on the top of the valve spring retainer and gave the extension a few hits with a hammer. A few whacks later the collets sprung out of their positions and the valve spring retainer was freed.
I also used this method on the MX-5 motor to pull one of the old damaged valves and two good ones - the old melted valve was pulled for curiousity's sake, and the good valves are going into the Familia motor.
And, the head with the valves removed:

While waiting for parts, I needed something to do. Seeing as I didn't need to touch the intake side of the head, on went the intake camshaft.
Cleaning up the valvesNext, I began work on the valves. I bought a steel wire brush and with a spray of some degreaser I managed to clean a lot of crap off of the valves. Some of it was extremely stubborn though - I don't have any strong solvents I can use so I just left the valve faces as is. I did manage to get most of the carbon off of the valve stems though. I also gave the rear of the valves a good clean to make sure that the seal would be as tight as can be expected without lapping. Technically, I should have gotten valve grinding paste and used that - but this is my temporary motor, so it doesn't have to be a 100% job. I won't skip this part for my built MX-5 motor though.
