After replacing the stem seals one last time, the intake/exhaust cam came is out and the stock exhaust cam is back in.
After visually checking the clearances on my bad head and also the evidence that the lift is a bit much on the exhaust side, I switched back. When static, the bottom of the retainer has about 1mm or so of clearance from the top of the valve stem seal. Obviously when turning near 14k and several times a second, that value goes down and eventually the bottom of the retainer smacks the top of the stem seal.
The one month old APE seals had some very obvious witness marks to what did them in. I thought it was heat at first but it's pretty obvious that it's impact.
Besides that, this swap isn't really as straightforward as the swaps the guys on the SV boards do. If you've ever held a B4 or GSXR cam in your hands, you realize the lobes are very particularily shaped as far as opening and closing before the tdc/btdc. On an SV, it looks like a normal cam lobe, very asymmetrical so the cam doesn't mind spinning the other direction. With the B4 cam, it puts these opening and closings at different points thus changing the cam's profile entirely. To visually line up the lobes as best as possible, it's also necessary to advance the cam about 8* and even then the opening and closing is a best case scenario. The TDC points hit much earlier than the factory exhaust and affect the power delivery.
So there you have it. It would work if the valve guide were modified by shortening and even then it still isn't perfect. I have to admit though, when I was running it the power was great.
-Randy