Further to this discussion. I have continued researching, and it appears that the compression is a common issue with these engines. It appears that setting the value clearance to a tight .004" to allow the exhaust valve to open a fraction of a second sooner will release some of the compression, thereby allowing the starter to spin the engine with less amps.
Also I have determined that there is a couple of design flaws with the starter, there are three generations of the starter, the third generation solves this issue as well as a few other issues. The third generation has nine teeth instead of ten (More torque), a thicker shaft(less breakage) and a bunch of other things.
The third generation costs money, so I will not be doing that one right away (my starter still spins sometimes). I shall tackle the valve setting first, if that is not enough, then I shall reevaluate a new starter.