d...one other question. Did they change the way the crank is made/put together from the 103" crank when they did the 110". I had read about the connecting rods being a lot different in appearance (heard Jim's used to make the ones in the 103's?), and lighter. I guess if the piston is significantly lighter, the wrist pins and upper part of the rod could also be lighter/thinner, so let's hope they got that right... 
The three piece “press together” construction is the same as the ’06 and earlier. Visually, the flywheels look the same except for the connecting rods in the ’07’s. The sprocket shaft of the ’07 is made differently in order to accommodate the new compensating sprocket assembly.
Jim’s makes the Screamin’ Eagle 4 3/8” Flywheel assembly for H-D; they do not make the OEM assembly. For what it’s worth, the CVO machines have always run H-D built flywheels, not Jim’s.
The Screamin’ Eagle Catalog on page 48, A and B picture the Jim’s and H-D flywheel assemblies together; A is Jim’s and B is H-D. The flywheels pictured in B are for 2006 and earlier applications; the ‘07’s run different connecting rods. There may be an issue with the application for part number 23729-07. The application says that it will fit ’06 Dyna’s, but these machines do not run the ’07 connecting rods and pistons. I believe that in ’06 Jim’s were the only 4 3/8” flywheels available through H-D for the Dyna’s. 23729-07 is the OEM number for all 2007 and later Big-Twins, including the 110” CVO’s.
The OEM connecting rods for ’07 and later Big Twins are visually quite different than the earlier OE pieces. The most significant difference is the upper I-Beam section has a smaller profile and the wrist-pin end is wedge shaped; the earlier rods are squared off on top. The wedge shaped wrist-pin end fits into a special piston with a wedge cut into the bottom.
The piston skirts are shorter due in part to the longer stroke. It is my sense that the most significant reciprocating weight savings came from the I-Beam and small end of the connecting rods; the new I-Beam is really quite diminutive.
You don’t see or hear of connecting rods breaking very often. The only broken con-rod that I ever saw was from a 1971 1200. The rod became severed at the base, near the crankpin. Additional material was added to the base of the connecting rods in the 1983 model year, in anticipation of the EVO in 1984. Beefing-up the big end and lightening the top of the I-Beam would be consistent with my limited experience in dealing with failures of this type.
djkak