Jay, Sean, I respect your comments and experience, but I personally have not had good luch without heat.
My old friend and long-time machinist Charles (maker of frame kits Charles) has worked on aluminum heads everyday for over 30 years and has never broken a stud. Me, I've done 6 motorcycle engines where I removed every stud and I've broken 2 off. The corrosion of 2 dis-similar metals and the fact the threads are different - somehow a more precise fit and you have recipe for broken studs. (I've screwed up a nice H2 case and original studs by using a regular tap and die to chase the stud and case threads - they had slop in them afterwards).
I wanted your APE studs installed in my CB750 hotrod project bike. Charles heated the block in an oven to 400 for about 10-15 minutes and removal was super easy. He used 2 Visegrips clamped near the bottom in opposing positions (12 and 6 o'clock) and turned then a half turn. The opposing force keeps side-load from adding to the stress the stud has during removal. I then took a socket and simply turned them the rest of the way using a ratchet and double nuts. The initial break was what made it safe.
According to him, you can use a torch or the oven - what you want to do is heat the aluminum block and not the studs. The studs don't heat up as fast since they are a lot more dense. Nowadays, I will try to get them out since it makes cleaning the gasket surface easier and I like to have them hard-chromed. In the case of my KZ900 project just done, I wanted to install APE studs, but if double nutting won't do it - then I leave them alone. If I had the cases apart, then in the oven they would go. Here is a complete set of "chromed" 1970 H1 studs - but heat was mandatory.
When they break - it's not pretty and not something an Easy-out tool is going to handle.
Regards,
Gordon