Well done Brian. Personally, I would have removed most of the material from within the eccentric straps as they simply look far too heavy to my eye. (Maybe you are a bit unsure yourself, from the tone of your posts? A web should be mostly space holding outer the outer (thick) rails apart, like any well designed "minimalist" beam. Possibly I would have made them using brass extrusions as 2 outer rails forming the triangle with the eccentric bearing, with just a couple of stiffening struts (for appearance) filling the triangular gap. Otherwise a nice looking job!
How is the balance? I wonder if you put the primary counterbalance (in opposition to the big-end, pistons, cross-heads and rods) on the crank, then applied some secondary counterbalance (for the side-to-side oscillations of the con-rods plus counterbalance for the eccentrics?) on the crankshaft? That way there would be little torsional oscillation in the gears. Could the counterbalancing even be achieved by the calculated drilling of gears, so un-drilled zones become the counterweights? Lots of scope with your design and I am curious as to what you have done.
I'm sure as a Design Engineer you can do the calcs, (I would love to see them to learn from you!) but I just follow the calcs in locomotive design text books. Freezing outside today (and cold in the garage) so I may just have a play with the text books and slide rule myself on some guesstimated masses of your design!
Brian's fun becomes Brain fun!
Goodonya! - and Happy New Year. I look forward to more of your genius in 2021.
K2