(Nothing serious about this comment):
Ahhh, just go back to a 383 Chrysler: Forged crank and 6.1" forged rods with -- although heavy -- well-made cast pistons in a 4.25 bore/3.38 stroke motor for a 1.88 ratio. Deep skirted, extra-strong blocks, etc, etc. Runs forever.
(An easy flywheel 325 HP/425 TQ engine what with todays gizmos. The big block that revv'd like a small block).
Too bad it was larger and heavier (in some respects) than a 454 Chevy (though to be fair, a good bit smaller than a 440 Chrysler).
Used to be that the foreigners had it over us for the elegance of design, et. al., but couldn't begin to match American cars for good old durability and reliability.
I miss it.
(And no surpise that I'm looking around for another 2WD 2001 Cherokee to complement the one we already have: plenty of off-idle torque and a wide power band in a 242 cid straight six (225 TQ @ 3000/195 HP @ 4600]; very good Aisin-Warner transmission [similar to a TH-700]. Front-engine, rear-wheel drive, high ground clearance, solid axles, excellent mileage, long-wearing, millions-made [and still in prodiction overseas]: The Model A all over again. Adaptable to many missions).
Hearing about production engine design that belongs on a race-only vehicle (those pistons/rings, ukgaaah), what a disappointment.
It's all dependent on the electronic control devices acting perfectly to never exceed preset parameters (yeah, right).