I've been running a K24 BRZ for about a year and a half now, I'm not really happy with how KPower has handled communication on issues, but that it is what it is for this chassis right now - there is no other game in town. This will probably be a long post that no one really needs to read since it is specific to the 86/BRZ/FRS chassis. I'll give a distilled overview of track issues I've come across with it for others looking to do similar.
Most of the annoying issues have been on the electrical end and required me diagnosing them myself - everything from the wrong ground used for oil temp causing temp to correlate with DBW position, pins not being fully crimped and working themselves out, or earlier adapter board revisions missing the connection to control the fuel pump relay they sold. You also have to tie the harness down well or it'll chafe right through on the valve cover, I ended up wrapping mine in Roundit 2000. Turning the car off without starting it isn't possible on push start cars right now, but that is a Haltech issue since it worked at one point and was broken during an update.
I broke a few throttle body bolts with the stock BRZ throttle body so I tried moving to the Bosch 74mm TB. The KPower adapter leaked air because it was designed in such a way that there are two spots where the gasket has less than 1mm of overlap so it gets squeezed out, after realizing that and sealing it I still broke throttle body bolts. I also tested another throttle body adapter by Ichiban Engineering that used o-rings to seal on both sides instead of traditional gaskets, but I found the next issue which was that the vibration destroys the Bosch throttle bodies. The internal TPS traces get worn through or the plastic gears get eaten at WOT, I killed a new OEM Bosch in 3 track days.
This ended in talking to Winning Formula, testing a one of his welded vibration resistant adapters, having it leak air, having a friend sketch up a set in Fusion 360, and test running the car on the 3d printed ones. WF ended up taking inspiration and ended up with a modified version of the design sealed with o ring route. He sent my friend and I a set, which I thought was really cool. No issues since the new adapter.
The original swaps were sold with Sachs pressure plates and clutch disks, I ended up ordering a set from a german company but quickly heard through the grape vine that the pressure plates were exploding in track cars. I pulled mine out and replaced it with Exedy OEM BRZ stuff and it has been fine... for the most part. Steel over aluminum for flywheel is much preferred, but I found this out too late.
My 1pc KPower driveshaft vibrated above 50mph and made grinding noises on decel, I ended up having my OEM driveshaft cut down 5.5" and spaced down the center support bearing. Everything has been fine here since.
Get a valve cover that vents out the top rather than the side, mine pushed oil out in right hand turns until I fixed this; same issue as the S2000 has stock. I basically no oil in the can now.
I had a Miata water neck on the car because I cut the thermostat jiggle pin and also routed the normally blocked off thermostat outlet back to the water outlet in attempt to get the thing to be easier to bleed. Apparently this port had been drilled and tapped improperly for years, I ended up pulling the water neck out of the car and realized it'd been leaking out the threads since I put the motor in back in May 2022. I bought another water neck in September 2023 only to realize it was improperly tapped too, so I called KPower. Apparently they'd been like this the whole time so they fixed the CAD stuff and sent me another but I still had to pay.
It seems that a lot of the non-OEM coolant temperature sensors are extremely thin walled, I had a Hella one crack and break off a few weeks ago at an event, which was a gigantic pain since its against the firewall. I put another Duralast into the waterneck and it immediately broke off before it fully seated, which let me see just how thin they are (like .1mm at the first thread). New OEM Honda one has been fine.
In September I misshifted the car at an event - top of 3rd to 2nd, about 10k rpm and the pressure plate came apart - one of the rivets popped and got ejected. I've never had a misshift on track before, so I was kinda confused. Turns out the shift rod KPower sells is aluminum with steel pins, the steel pins open up the clearance over time and eventually lead to a ton of slop due to tolerance stacking. I put a new motor into the car because I didn't want to find out it wasn't all fine the hard way an event or two later. I ended up emailing KPower about this and they basically told me that they knew and that they'd consider fixing it in the future, so I ended up buying a new one at full price.
Anyhow, that has been my experience so far - I generally find it painful to spend over $10k with a company and have to track down issues on my own or have the company say tough luck time after time. If you make public posts about issues on the FB group you get the standard "We've been working on XYZ for a while guys" reply.
I think I've done about 40 events with the car since the swap - I've managed to sort it and keep it on track reliably enough to win a NASA TT5 regional championship, as well be current defender of 7 TT5 records. We will see how it goes.