Look in an early build manual - it contains a listing of all the engines.
You are concerned about more than the crank. Is there a governor pad? If there is, are the internal gears fitted to drive it? Is the nose of the crankcase drilled to accept an oil fitting? The crank is almost certainly hollow and plugged, but worth checking.
The only show stoppers are probably a solid crank and no hole in the crankcase nose. Both can be fixed, but the cost will likely be too high. The gears in the back can be added, but will be surprisingly expensive. The less that is there the less the engine is worth to you.
If the cost at the end of all the work is more than 70% the price of a new engine, its probably not worth it. Used engines always seem to have something wrong with then 200 hours after being put back into service.
Pete
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