Whoa, boys: here's the skinny on the Honda chambers:
You might notice there are pockets around the valves in the stock head. These are there to guide the incoming charge into a swirl, which accelerates as the piston rises. This causes centrifugal force to spin the fuel mixture toward the cylinder walls and accelerate gas movement SIDEWAYS across the head at TDC time. This makes a richer mix appear along the metal surfaces of the head and cylinder walls, which both preheats the mixture and cools the metal parts. When the spark fires, it is "spread" along a longer bit of the mixture because it is moving very quickly across the face of the spark plug at that moment. This is the patented Honda Combustion Process (HCP), popularly known as the CVCC (Controlled Velocity Combustion Chamber) engine in the U.S. Be very careful how you modify these chambers, because introducing cross-currents can quickly introduce knock that cannot be stopped with octane or timing changes.
For a clue toward the right way to change things, look up my post about Top End Tricks (Tips). You will see my modified 750 head's chambers there. This method removes significant portions of the peak edges of the pockets, turning it inot more of a hemi-style head, to increase torque at lower RPM. It also lowers compression, so measure carefully when doing it. You MUST remove the center ridge from the combustion chamber before doing the following quench change, just like in my picture. Otherwise, the piston will hit the chamber, right on the ridges.
To modify the system and add quench, do it in the center of the piston. With a heliarc welder, draw a bead acorss the center of the piston, on axis with the crankshaft. This ridge can be as much as .125" high, but must be carefully relieved for edge-of-head clearance and tested for valve clearance. You can remove piston skirt weight to rebalance the piston to the original weight afterward, so measure carefully before and after. Be sure to smooth this ridge out, so there are no hot spots left that can hold carbon and create a heating problem. This brings your compression ratio back, too.
It's tricky, but worth every minute!