Depends, Jay.
Few years back I opened the hangar door (the big 60ft wide variety) and turned to walk to my airplane to take her up for another one of the Phase I flights when I noticed that something was off with my prop. Now, don't ask me what it was, but there was something off. Didn't look right.
Pulled the spinner and saw that the prop and the crush plate were out of alignment by - get this - 1/16th of an inch. Started pulling things apart to investigate - my then "going to be a partner in the airplane" buddy was putting the engine and prop together - he's built a couple of airplanes with Jabiru engines, he knows things, right? Wrong. Stock Jab bushings are made for AN4 bolts - just like the stock Jab props - or so I'm told. Sensenich props are made for AN6 bolts. Plan is, you take the bushings, drill them out - you get the idea. But no - the genius just stuck AN4s in there (so that there was some good air cushion between the bolts and the prop "meat") and however well he "torqued" it (in accordance with the instructions that come with the Sensenich logbook, I might add), the prop was starting to go outta whack. By 1/16" at the time I caught it. I grounded the airplane until I went through every single thing he touched and fixed a couple more items (nothing nearly as big though). Needless to say, that relationship didn't go far.
I still have those AN4 bolts in my drawer. They held up for 11.5 hours