Good excuse to build a stroker! I would. Anyway, the broken ring indicates lots 'o' miles or detonation. Detonation will kill bearings. I used to race at Union Grove, WI back in the day, and I know you guys have really good air there. I used to have to bump up my jet size 6 numbers. How does the top of the piston look? Are the deposits white, brown or black? Are the deposits thick or thin? Thick deposits can contribute heavily to detonation on two fronts, 1. It increases compression 2. The carbon heats up and glows, pre-igniting the air-fuel charge. Anyway, if your'e going to build a stroker, Eagle makes a 4.15" stroke forged crank for about $795. Good place to start your build. Hughes Engines and Speed-O-Motive also make complete stroker rotating assemblies, balancing extra of course! Build your engine around your cam. Pick your displacement (498 ci, 520 ci, etc.), pick your cam, your cam choice will dictate the compression you will need to run as well as your peak rpm. Once you know the compression you need, choose your pistons and heads. Make sure your heads will flow up to the max lift your cam specs at (even though the valve stays at max lift for very short period of time! Some builders like to enhance head flow .100" below max lift for best performance.). OK, now you know what your max rpm is you can choose the parts that will live at that rpm level. CAT and Eagle cranks are Chinese. Eagle parts are better than CAT and even Mopar Performance are now using Eagle parts in their crate stroker small blocks (whenever they come out!). Callies are the best, and they are made in the USA, but they are not cheap. I believe that I read in Hot Rod mag a while ago that Callies cranks are made from Chinese blanks, not because Callies wants too, but because the high quality blanks needed are just not available anymore in the U.S. Apparently, the demand for these blanks just cannot support a foundry here in the U.S.A. Yeah, I know it sucks, but I have been using Eagle parts for 3 years now and have not experienced a failure, nor seen any quality control problems yet. Anyway, good luck on your stroker build (you are going to build it now, right?)! Let us know how it turns out.