Naah, Dirty Earnie, I won't argue about something I know nothing about.
Point is that the results of grooving sounds intuatively correct. If you take a narrow angle Hemi heads, they have a poor mixture motion. Polished combustion chambers do really poorly for BSFC.
I've been told by aero engineers, that everything in the Internal Combustin engine is turbulent, so all the lamina flow crap expoused by people selling or designing clean but ineffective heads is a herasay. If one can create pressure gradients which allow nitrogen to be exposed to spark, squish and have localised points of lamina flow where the the flame front can generate from, then we've hit paydirt.
Everything said seams right on the basis of the evidence from engine modifiers. Only question I have is why haven't the GM Powertrain team discovered this? As far as I am aware, their work on mixture motion has been a living legend, and the efforts have saved millions of unit cost on not going to multivalve engines.
Keep hard tabs on this one, brother.