Thanks Terry, I can breathe a little better now that I know that the trans may not yet be dead. I will take some better pix of the cam and post soon.
No worries Edward, that cam doesn't look like a stocker, are there any other markings on it? Is the cam sprocket "slotted", so you can adjust the cam timing? Anyway, that'd explain the heavy duty springs etc, if you take Mark's advice and replace the springs with stock springs, you might need to swap out that cam for a stocker.
The pistons look like stockers, although they could be oversize, you'd need to measure the bores to find out. Shine a torch into the inlet ports and see if they've been modified, if they have they'll look and feel pretty smooth. If they haven't, they'll feel pretty rough and there'll be some "casting marks" in evidence.
Re: your torn out helicoils, the "Timeserts" that Davez134 mentioned will fix that problem, just follow the instructions to the letter. I don't know how deep you want to go into your engine, but if you drop your oil pan and there aren't any big chunks of metal in evidence, and if you grab your conrods and can't feel any upward "slop" in the main or "big end" bearings, you probably don't need to delve deeper, unless you really want to.
If you decide to go further, make sure that you've got a digital camera to take lots of pics of what it looked like before disassembly, plus a copy of the factory parts manual, (for exploded diagrams of the various assemblies) and a workshop manual. A lot of guys here get overwhelmed on their first engine rebuild, and end up "shelving" their projects, but if you do it carefully and methodically, you'll have no problems. Cheers, Terry.