I would rather have the piece of mind that I gave it a solid fighting chance if I were building a new motor. The AF is not worth it IMO for just a cam swap on a crank that has already seen the original firing order harmonics since the stock cam has already proven to be more than efficient enough to break stock rods/pistons. :roflmao:
I would run an AF with a full build and a fresh crank though as I did on my first build. I used a new LML crank the first go around. The current build is getting a narrow rod Bryant crank from SoCal. There are a few high horsepower people out there than may speak up about their findings as well. The longevity at high horsepower definitely increased with less crank failures for a given time period in the same application. Obviously its not an end all, however, I do think it may help a little. There is really not enough solid evidence to prove one way or another, but its worth a shot to me if I am already swapping the cam for a build anyway. Its a very small cost compared to the total bill, why risk it...