Nice way to do it!
Doesn't it make you want a ceiling-mounted cable trolley?
My wants are many but my realistic bank account says otherwise, LOL.
Yeah, mine, too. I have a ceiling-hung block-and-tackle for lifting up heavy stuff. For pulling-putting 750 engines I still use my old 'platform' approach of building a 10" high brick (or cement block, etc.) platform on the bike's right side. Then I remove the oil pan and pump (CB750) and bolt on a flat steel plate that I made to protect the gasket surface: it gives me another inch less engine height and makes things MUCH easier in-out. Then I don't worry about the engine sitting on the (protected by cardboard and ty-wraps) frame on the way out/in, which makes it just a 50-lb lift a couple of times, and 3 or 4 'wiggles' out-in.
Someone here invented a clever wooden "rotisserie hook" some years ago and sent me one to try out. It works great for raising the engine off the frame, but I don't have room to rig up his clever sawhorse-like supports on both sides of the bike, with a long 3" [steel?] pipe between them, so the engine can then just be lifted up and then slid out/in. I suspect Honda had something like that on the K1-K3 production lines. The K0 was uniquely loaded with the frame laying on its right side (engine also, in a wooden box below the frame) and the engine was then lifted up into the frame (from the reports I've seen years ago) and the 3 long bolts installed, then the frame was lifted and righted. The process at the Old Factory for the K1-K3 was said to be done with a hoisted engine brought alongside the (more completed than K0) frame with wheels, then a platform came up from below the frame, raising the engine alongside, and it was just pushed into the frame. Once in a while I've seen sideways marks on the oil pans that suggest the right-front-lower bolster hit it on the way in. After that I know the method changed again, but I never got to find out how it was done.