Yes, and the VA State Police are forced to do the dirty work for this state, since with the 'remedial fees' that they just enacted - $1000 speeding 'fee' on top of the regular fine for residents only! It doesn't pay to live and pay taxes in VA anymore, they'll screw you anyhow!

Sorry to get on that! But what you say is very true and they are using laser to detect your speed now. The police seem more predatory than safeguarding lately, especially on the highway, like mercenary? But some people get away with most anything, like the stereo types story again. "Who's tha man in tha black Jap sedan that just cut you off - Shaft - that's who" --going too far away from the topic, I am----

The iron lined aluminum cylinders are much more efficient than solid cast iron. Aluminum will transfer and dissipate the engine's heat far better than the iron, so what we have right now is the best 'compromise' or the best of both worlds. And I will guarantee that those iron cylinders are a product of China! But, the quality of their castings are very much better than years past where you had to grind a bore out because if the glassy hard inclusions in the cast iron. The iron foundries in the USA are so EPA'd that they are stuck making man hole covers, dam shame. I make some castings once in a while in my back yard and I sometimes look up to see if the EPA is flying around looking at all this heat going up into the sky - bound to be illegal!
Iron is very intimidating to work with in its molten state! It's so hot that a drop of water into the crucible doesn't have time to turn to steam, it separates into hydrogen and oxygen and explodes sending droplets of super hot molten iron into the sky. A drop of molten iron hitting a person in the head is fatal. It will cauterize a hole down through the skull and down into the brain. You be seriously dead!
Enough of this cheerful stuff!
Looking back at the photo in your first post...if you lay a straightedge across the top of a slipped cylinder, do you see an indication of the liner slipping down? And in that case, wonder what would happen if the cylinder were set up in a hydraulic press inverted and the liner were pressed back up? Do you suppose that the liner has actually become free in the jug? Also, wonder if HD has done any destructive testing to determine what is going on here; I guess we'll never know about that. I keep watching this 110 and haven't seen any cylinder activity but I'm just getting to the mileage that members here who have had the problems began to encounter them. I'll scream like mad when I see something, and I'm anxious about it - as if it is 'when' and not 'if'. This is such a pathetic defect! They made a cheap to manufacture cylinder, then tried to cheapen it even more ruining the only thing left that was good about the HD engine - longevity. 'course the timing chain helped there too!
BC