I haven't heard much on the forum of other people having failures, but this has been my experience:
I've actually had 2 pairs fail in about 250 hours. The first pair were red that I understood were supposed to be more reliable than the previous (green?) ones. The first failure happened around 170 hours. As those failed, I bought more from AeroConversions that were also red, but actually have the AeroConversions logo on them (my previous ones had no logo). When those failed (didn't last as many hours as the first pair), I bought similarly spec'd (3 Ohm) Dynatek ones that I'm currently flying behind, but don't have enough time on them to determine their reliability.
There's a recent thread where guys are successfully trying 5 ohm coils for the lower current draw:
viewtopic.php?f=7&t=4978 I've bought a pair for when the current ones fail with the thought that they might be less sensitive to external heat since their internal resistive heating will be lower. Dynatek even has a FAQ that addresses this:
The resistance of the coil determines how much current flows through the ignition system. The 3 ohm coils, because of their lower resistance, pass more current and therefore run warmer than the 5 ohm coils. This is most likely to occur under worst case conditions, such as creeping along in traffic on a hot day in Arizona (this isn¹t so great for an air cooled engine either!). Rather than get into the specifics of every application we make the general recommendation - 5 ohm for street, 3 ohm for race.
I've also had both primary ignitions fail once each.
All these failures have been making me think that I should learn something about blast tubes, but I don't have any proof that these failures are due to heat and hate to add complexity if it isn't required. I've got quite a collection of failed coils, though, if anyone has an x-ray machine or otherwise knows how to inspect them :-)