>> the SE heads I have are supposed to have a 72CC combustion chamber, according to the documentation (I haven't CC'd them myself) ............. but I'm running stock pistons, or am planing to .... you running stock pistons ? <<
Production tolerances sometimes stack up against you, so if you want to be precise, I'd CC them. I think they are pretty close right out of the box, from what I read. Mine had the Branch combustion chamber polish job and perhaps some unshrouding around the valves, so the combustion chamber was a few CCs larger than stock. Even Branch said as much.
The pistons are flat top with valve notches, but not stock, Wiseco. Short Block Charlie had a good price on them, but he bored the cylinders with slightly more clearance than I wanted. Doesn't seem to hurt anything, but a few K miles out, it may be loose.
The most important thing is a balanced combination. It is true that we all want torque. It is also true that the stock cam is good for torque and some of the aftermarket cams can be better. But when you kick the compression ratio up to about 9.5 or more, then you need a little more cam so that detonation is not an issue. Too short a cam is -bad- with a higher than stock compression ratio. The W6 should perform very well with your setup. The later intake close will be very nice with your c/r.
One more thing, the efficient combustion chamber design of the SE heads does not need as much timing as you might think. It is possible that, if you use high octane gas, that even if the engine does not knock, you may be losing power with the timing too far advanced. The engine is having to push the piston against the rising combustion pressure and it will cost some HP. Each generation of Harley engines needs less timing than the one before. A good dyno tune will nail this down for you.
Wood can probably tell you how much timing this setup likes.
You & I have almost the same setup except my cam is .560 lift and I'm using the SE air cleaner, stock HD lifters, a tuned CV and Daytona Twin Tec ignition. Otherwise, right down to the pushrods, we're the same. We're even using the same pipes right now but I have an E-pipe that if I can get time, I'll get it Jet-Hot coated and put it on. Then maybe take it to a good dyno tuning shop in central Florida for finish tuning. I doubt that can happen before late Spring, though. If I can get time, I'll scan and email the results. Maybe post them here, too. If you get yours dynoed first, let me know how it turns out.
Bullwinkle