The Rotec, not seeing one in person and doing a close study of the parts, and just seeing various video's on them, it looks like there are some not very well thought out parts used, and like you say improper materials and heat treat. It sounds like the customer relations isn't too great either.
Compositepro (Chemical)
Yeah and you can turn it a bit by hand too off compression, to give in a running head start. The big problem is when the parts that broke move like if you go over a bump, and broke parts get bounced into the moving parts, not so good things can happen.
Even repairing those engines is no guarantee it will not break again, the system is a good idea but not built correctly, why is that? Sarcastically its not because of engineering!
Then there is the ill designed cylinder head, block deck interface, that can barely hold the head gasket in place, why is that? Yup engineering disaster.
Engineering Disasters, isn't that what this section here on this site is about?
Engineering failures / disasters end up costing someone something.
There really is no excuse for most of these engine problems nowadays. Do they just not test things and depend solely on a computer simulation these days? I just don't see how else this can happen.
Or is it that there are no more real machinists that do the preliminary fabrication and building these engines, that can point out to the engineer that this won't work well or last too long.