The answers I was looking for, I guess, would be two part. You answered the 1st part with your last paragraph, thanks. A few ads do tell the date of the OH and when you divide the time into it you might come up with 12 hrs per yr over the last 25 yrs (can't be good).
2nd part of the answer I was looking for: First let me say this is completely hypothetical, I don't own a plane...yet.
I will just bluntly ask.
What are the repercussions of me pulling my own certified engine, pulling the cylinders for inspection (after compression check), cracking the case open, micing the camshaft and crank, and popping the crank bearing caps off to lay a strip of plastigauge in there to check wear. What would stop me from taking the crank to my local machine shop (or sending off to an aircraft shop) to get the crank cleaned up and they supply me with the appropriate bearings? Same question for the cam.
These engines we are talking about are 60+ yr old technology. It seems absolutely insane to me to spend $25k on a rebuild. This is simple stuff.
I have experience rebuilding street engines but a family member is the expert. He has experience with perfectly balanced race engines that easily turn 3x the rpm's these Lycoming/Continentals do.
$950 doesn't seem t o o o o o bad for a cylinder/piston/valves/etc assm. but almost $4000 for certain ones? Really? It's just chunks of metal. My buddy could build them from scratch for that (probably with closer tolerances).
almost end of rant
If I rebuild my own certified engine and it runs for 35 yrs (I'll be dead by then) what is the harm?
If I'm willing to fly behind my self built engine why does the FAA care? If the gov't would spend more time looking in the mirror rather than trying to protect us from ourselves we'd be much better off. Let pilots do their own thing (to certified) and stipulate no passengers for the 1st 100 hrs, 200 hrs, whatever.
Can y'all (southern term) tell I don't like people telling me what I can do to my own stuff?