If someone can pull a higher resolution pic from the ad, it would be better to speculate from. Bare pad with no paint would be better yet to show the presence or absence of broaching marks, or the feed lines of a deck milling machine. The casting number and date would help -
Byron's correct - depends on how dull the broach bar segments were, really how long the tool had been in service or the life cycle before replacement. Even with a lengthy bar, the rate at which the engines went through the line and the linear length of the head deck likely meant a few days to a week or so before indexing had to take place. A local plant here with an Xcello Lapointe flat broach segmented bar (12 foot X 12" rough and finish twin setup) ran about 2 weeks life, 800 ductile iron parts a day, three shifts 7 days a week. Drag lines in the part result from cutting edge height and nicks/dings in the cutting edge of the bar itself. A lot of modern engine production uses a milling cutter nowadays -
Regards,
Steve