The original system with rectangular slide valves that were driven by the twin and double spring-loaded carriers is thus replaced by circular slide valves that moving up and down with the simple and single wire springs. A heat shield that also serves as a guide for the springs prevents the springs from losing their resilience due to annealing by the alcohol flames, something that it was a problem with the original design.
In fact the spring only must carry the valves with a pressure as low as possible against the cylinder head in order to make the friction low. The light spring force must only ensure that the valves remain pretty flat against the cylinder head while going up and down. This is a matter of making the springs with the right dimensions and bending them "on the spot" in the right shape.
This spring pressure itself is hardly or not important for the good sealing because that sealing is a result of the outside pressure that presses the valves against the cylinder head when the partial vacuum in the cylinder occurs while the cooling-down of the sucked-in flame gasses, provided the slides are flat positioned against the cylinder head during that process period.