If you are going to spend money on having the crank turned, you probably shouldn't cut corners on the rest. I would take the block, head, and rods to a machine shop and have them check everything. You know that you will at least need the crank refinished and one rod, but not checking the other rods, bores, journals etc could cost you twice as much if it fails and you have to do it again. I bought my 642b with a spun bearing, and the motor disassembled. To repair my crank (which needed welding on one journal) was going to be nearly $500. When looking for a different option, I found that auto-zone sells remanufactured cranks, and offers one for an 80s dodge colt, which had this motor. I don't know that they are the same for sure, but it might be something worth looking into, as it was under 200 with bearings. I ended up doing a diesel conversion, and never tried the auto-zone crank.