The Commonwealth Norton, for which I once rebuilt the engine (878 cc), and which I later bought, used custom Crower titanium rods. It was run several times at Daytona, and the rods were still good the last time I tore it down. I also have a set of extended length Crower titanium rods that I had made for a short stroke 750 with shorter pistons, which I never built. The problem I've seen with the Crower rods, is that the small end weight, which is where you gain most of the advantage of light rods, is only slightly less than standard Carrillo steel rods, significantly more than Jim Schmidt's light weight Carrillo rods, and way more than the stock aluminum rods. The big end weight on the later Crower rods is less than either the Carrillo or the stock rods, but that's rotating weight, not reciprocating, so isn't as significant. To gain the real benefit from titanium rods, they would need to be properly designed using FEA to optimize the design, not just copied from old steel rod designs, as the Crowers appeared to be. That's what the factory guys do for their titanium rods, and probably what Carrillo does for it's rods. It would be interesting to see how the weights would turn out for a Carrillo titanium Norton rod vs. their standard steel rod, but someone would have to cough up the cash to have some made, and it certainly won't be me.
Titanium rods for Norton's have been around for a long time. I used to have a titanium rod for my basket case Manx project that was made here in Southern California back in the '60s. It went with the project when I sold it.
Ken