The real weakness of the small journal crank is the poor oil supply to the drive side big end journal. The oilway between the two big ends is simply a small cross drilling, and any sludge settling here produces the inevitable expensive calamity. The big journal crank with its bigger diameter labyrinth oilway, in effect a tube within a tube, addresses this, but again any sludge decreases the oil flow.
Big End Journal sizes are used to define the crank, small journal is early type, larger journals and improved sludge trap comes later and the later conrods also look and feel more substantial and have easier access to the big end nuts. The surface loading on the bearings are comparable, big journal bearings are narrower....
Conrods.
A10 small journal are marked 67 270. Big journal 67 1160. Any other following letters and numbers relate to production forging identity.
Early A10 rods use a reduced hex flanged castle nut with split pin on the big end bolt. Later versions have a larger hex. The part number changes to reflect this, which from experience indicates a different machined profile to the big end cap to improve access to the larger hex nut. The actual conrod forgings appear to be identical.
All A7 cranks are of the same small journal diameter, even mainstream Longstroke versions using steel conrods.
I reckon thin flange barrels are thicker than 1/4". We're talking the thickness of the barrel mounting flange to the crankcase mounting face, not the cylinder lower spigots' wall thickness into the crankcase.
Swarfy.