Depending on how much material has been removed and how large the exhaust ports have been massaged they may be more suitable for a turbo application or a natural aspirated engine build with LOTS of compression to overcome the lack of decent back pressure. I have used heads with larger exhaust ports before that ran hard but had lots of TLC into the overall head. If they are opened to 1 5/8 or larger,these are NOT your ticket to ride. If opened to 1 1/2 then they can be used with good results. In reality you will need a 42 intake to help overcome the exhaust saturation and some good compression @ 9:5 min. If you can post a picture,that would help,also the measurement of the port will be helpful. Good luck, Dyno
To be clear, backpressure is always the enemy and you want to eliminate it whenever possible. The problem with excessively large ports (or poorly designed ones) is a lack of
velocity. True, an excessively large port will impose less backpressure but the detriment is the diminished velocity through the port and not the lack of backpressure.
As I understand it, the exhaust side of the Type I head generally outperforms the intake side so modifications to it without touching the intake side will create flow issues. And modifying the flange side of the port without touching the bowl side is usually a recipe for disaster. In fact many highly modified ports maintain a relatively small flange diameter--it's common that the exhaust remains larger than the port that feeds it. The entire port must maintain consistent velocity and touching one side of the port without addressing the other will impair velocity.
I agree with Don that these might not be the heads for you. I would consult a head specialist.