If I'm reading your question correctly, the IH manual refers to that as "where the valve lever contacts the valve stem contact," so it doesn't really have a name. It is not an insert, but that surface is hardened. It will wear, but a machine shop can resurface it, as long as there is enough hardened material there to work with.
As far as getting a blade in there, it needs to be a narrow one, as close to the width of the valve stem as you can manage. The surface of the arm is intentionally cupped -- the valve stem moves in a straight line while the arm moves on an arc, and it's that cup that keeps the pressure on the valve stem straight up and down.
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Today's Featured Article - An Old-Time Tractor Demonstration - by Kim Pratt. Sam was born in rural Kansas in 1926. His dad was a hard-working farmer and the children worked hard everyday to help ends meet. In the rural area he grew up in, the highlight of the week was Saturday when many people took a break from their work to go to town. It was on one such Saturday in the early 1940's when Sam was 16 years old that he ended up in Dennison, Kansas to watch a demonstration of a new tractor being put on by a local dealer. It was an Allis-Chalmers tractor dealership,
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