Ideally you do an initial cut with a carbide burr to get the shape close to what you desire, and then transition to a coarse cartridge roll, to refine the shape, and then move to fine cartridge roll to blend, smooth, and contour to close to the optimum size and shape. Then you can polish to the final port shape or size with anything from 180-240 grit cartridge rolls. If you want a mirror finish, you can achieve that with anything above 120 grit with a small dab of oil/grease/wd on your port walls. It takes patience, and a light hand to polish without removing metal in the wrong place at this stage. That is why I use a flapper roll for finishing out the ports, and I can get the finish as smooth as anything by simply adding water, or some type of oil/lubricant to the final polish. That is a waste of time in the long run, though, for it does absolutely nothing for horsepower gains, just looks good until the first start-up and then the exhaust gasses start building up, especially if there is a poor shape in the port that causes a turbulence. I often sandblast intake manifolds to restore the rough finish after I have the flow balanced and the flow I desire. Then I pressure wash the complete intake and store in a storage bag until ready for use, or shipping. Joe-JDC