I think those guys didn't have a 928 shop manual.
Here's a copy of a response that I sent via email to someone asking me about it:
I wrote:
I looked through the pictures the other day when it popped up.
I have no idea who viscomotorsports (whatever) are. They have no rep in the 928 world I inhabit.
I have zero idea how good is their work. But, I can tell you that I don't half-disassembled a 928 engine *before* pulling it to put on a stand. (See pictures.)
And when I pull an engine, the 928 get's fender covers (minimum) and I don't just drape bits and pieces on the painted parts of the car like those guys did.
They could have done good work. Or maybe not.
I didn't look super-closely at the pictures. I scanned the invoices. Meh.
It sure isn't clear that they did a thorough job.
As for head cancer. In general, IMO, 90+ heads are quite a bit more porous than pre-'90. If there are any pinholes in the deck you can be sure that there are "wormholes" of corrosion under the deck.
And you can't really confirm suspicions until you remove metal - which then requires welding.
Their explanation of why they pulled the engine is suspect to me: A burned valve is a symptom, not a cause. And I have trouble thinking of a realistic 928 failure mode with fueling that could cause "a" burned valve. (I suppose a zombie injector could cause this, but it would misfire and run badly and then you'd have to drive the piss out of it in that condition... Now that I think about it... I was asked to diagnose a piss-driven-outwards misfiring GT at Frenzy a couple of years ago... but it was white IIRC. LoL.)
Especially with low-mileage GTs/GTSs, I have found engines with poor compression and/or bad leak down and - it's almost always been carbon buildup on the valves and seats. That written, at higher mileages, a bunch of 32v engines are running around with one or two slightly bent valves based upon my experience.
If the shop had written "bent" not "burned" I would be somewhat less skeptical of the "value" of their work.
They did do one thing "right" in my book: Permatex copper gasket sealant on the head gaskets (see pictures.)
So...maybe it's not all bad.
The problem is: you never know how go is someone's work until you take it apart.
Hanlon’s Razor: Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.
Heinlein’s Corollary: Never underestimate the power of human stupidity.
The Reddit Conjecture: Sufficiently advanced stupidity is indistinguishable from malice.
Worf’s Razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which is adequately explained by laziness.
Worf’s Identity: Sufficiently advanced laziness is indistinguishable from stupidity
Worf's Law: Once you've mitigated risk from stupidity and laziness in your endeavors, failure is usually the result of insufficient imagination.
My 928 Inspection Guide