I agree Bruce, but the scenario lies that the builder admitted that he was at fault for not checking the deck height correctly, he should have turned the engine over by hand to check for any clearance issues, if he did not do that at all or just being plain lazy not to check it, that is wrong, if his motor blows up and the crank broke in 2 pieces, it is nobody's fault, just a defected crank. There's always something gonna happen when an engine gets put together no matter what, somethings gonna give over time, maybe after 2 rides or even after 15 years of riding, somethings gonna wear out or show signs of fatigue. The key on a good running, reliable engine is to run good parts and good oil, if the owner wants to run a 30 year old crank and a set of 40 year old rods, that is their choice and they should know that may be at risk of blowing up unless it is a good set, I mean getting checked for balance, fatigue, etc. I lost an engine about 3 years ago and it was my fault because I was experimenting it with a 4-barrel carburetor and tried all kinds of different routes to get it to run properly in the woods and every attempt failed, I mean it failed miserably it floods it out everytime and I had to take the plugs out to turn the engine over to blow the gas out the cylinders and some of it seep in to the oil and contaminated it and that's where my main fault lies, I should've changed it right away. I was trail riding at a Poker run when I finally got a set of dual Webers and everytime I go around a corner, my oil light comes on and I thought I was low on oil, I checked it and it was OK and I kept on going ignoring it and that was a painful lesson learned big time and it would'nt fall out of a tree, everytime I shut it off it did not want to start back up due to the low compression. When I took the engine apart, I was running a good crank but did not know the brand and it was gone, all the bearing surfaces were plum ate up and it is ruined, the rods was bone-stock I-beams and a used VZ-15 cam, I can tell by the surface of these parts that the person I got the engine off of lied to me telling me that everything is brand-new inside the case and it has brand new heads and the heads are bone-stock with stock valves looking like it ran for 30 years on a differnt engine. I learned my lesson big time and I never dealt with him again, I have nothing against him, it was just business. That is why I'd rather buy all parts NEW and have it done by a GOOD engine builder that knows what he is doing and I will be able to sleep at night

. I ran all CB Performance stuff for 2 years and it looked brand-new inside afterwards and the lifters hardly showed any wear on the surface like it was just put in that engine yesterday and it has been through hell several times mostly at Wellsville last year and it held up.