The differences in an A15 include
Taller block [+15mm]
Larger bore [+3mm]
Longer stroke crank [+12mm]
Shorter piston deck height.
Fitting an A15 crank into a 1200 or A12 block is not a practical, but a popular conversion is to use the A14 crank.
You need
1200 or A12 block
A14 crank [+7mm over 1200]
Late A12, or A12A, or short stroke A13 Rods
A15 pistons [not flat tops] These have a lower crown height than other A series pistons.
Bore block to 76mm, or 76.5mm, or 77mm
These are stock A15 sizes. At 77mm you are pushing your luck, but several engines have been built with this bore size & are running fine. 76mm is safer & will make the engine the same as an A14 capacity.
[My 1200 engine is currently at 76.5mm]
Bore late A12 rod to take larger A15 piston pin.
A12A & A13 rods have the right size small end. Early 1200 & A12 rods have less meat at the small end & are not the best choice.
At BDC, the piston is pulled down into the crank counterweight, so machine the crank in a lathe to reduce the diameter of the crank by a small amount to clear the piston.
To measure the amount, just place an old 1200 or A12 rod & piston on the A14 crank & rotate it around the crankshaft. It will hit on the counterweight. Place crank in lathe & machine off 2mm & retest. Machine more untill piston & rod can rotate around crank with about 1mm clearance.
You will need to machine a small amount from the top of the A15 pistons, so either do the math, or assemble one piston & rod [no rings] & do a trial assembly to measure how much that the piston rises above the deck of the block.
I think it's about 0.5mm.
Use an A14 or A15 head if you can for the larger ports & valves.
Please note that the rod length to stroke ratio is not good & the rod angle at half stroke gets pretty severe, causing some accelerated bore wear, but for racing applications, or relatively low mileage street use it will be fine for years.
With a 77mm bore & the 77mm stroke, you get 1434cc
Useful link 1Useful link 2Useful link 3Useful link 4