I'm not concerned about being 50-75 ft lbs low on torque on the race tune, it shreds the tires on tune 4 at anything under about 40mph even with a rear locker, let alone the race tune. I was just meaning if you stay in that 1250 ft lbs torque range you may randomely break a crank or even crack a lb7 piston before you bend a rod, it's anyone's guess. Some cranks break at stock power, and it's rare but lb7 pistons have randomely broke. Lots of people run 650+ on bone stock lbz's, and almost every single time it's the pistons that go, mine went at 575/1050. The rods are almost always just fine. If I'm gonna start throwing aftermarket rods and more than $6,000 at a motor it's going to be built to hold 1,000 hp+. Otherwise I'd stick with the keys and lbz/lb7 combo and keep it under 1250 tq and be happy with 650. For pistons, rods, springs, pushrods and a flexplate I would have right at doubled my build cost. Then I'm still stuck at 650 unless I go bigger fuel and air which is 1000's more. I decided to be content with 650 haha (MY FRIENDLY & HUMBLE OPINION ONLY)
As James said, you're adding parts that are not 100% needed to be considered reliable. The point is, on any stock rod motor lower rpm fueling/cylinder pressure is kept out of it to help the engine live. Your comment about at 1250ft-lbs you can randomly break a crank, that is true but you can also break them randomly at 550ft-lbs (OEM) or you could not have them fail to north of 2000ft-lbs. My truck is rods/pistons, stock crank, stock main caps, ARP main studs and has seen over 2200ft-lbs without failing. My point is the statement still stands, the crank failures are not a direct result of horsepower/torque. You will bend a LBZ rod from horsepower long before you break a crankshaft from horsepower IMO.
It's also not just 50 to 75 ft-lbs, I'm talking about area under the curve or average torque not the loss of peak torque. The average torque on a built motor truck at the same HP (lets say 675-700) is much higher, especially if it a truck equipped with lets say a set of compound turbos or a fast spooling VGT.
You don't need springs, pushrods, or a $700 billet flexplate to hold the power reliably. The sub $400 BD flexplate is a great option and will hold anything could ever make (I haven't seen one broken yet but I also haven't seen everything).