There are reports of the eBearings units failing after as little as one lap.
The original GM units can last for part of a season, but they are becoming very hard to find and many have unknown mileage.
Rodney's new tapered-roller bearings were a possible fix. Rodney acknowledges that his bearings aren't designed for track use, and has mentioned that making bearings as strong as the original GM ones is simply not feasible with the limited market for these parts. I tried Rodney's bearings and unfortunately ran into a failure after one weekend of HPDE at a relatively low speed track on 200 treadwear tires.
This leaves only a few options:
1) Adapt a knuckle from another car that already has a durable bearing assembly
2) Modify the knuckle to accommodate a durable bearing assembly
3) Fabricate a new knuckle that accommodates a durable bearing assembly
4) Make a new bearing that's at least as durable as the original Fiero part
Here's the current state of the different directions:
1) Kappa Platform (Pontiac Solstice / Saturn Sky) knuckles have been adapted to the '88 front suspension using alternate ball joints and a tie-rod rod-end adapter: http://www.fiero.com/forum/Forum3/HTML/0 ... .html#p286
2) I haven't seen this yet, but I have some ideas.
3) Held / Arraut makes drop spindles for the '88 Fiero that use the rear Fiero bearings: http://arrautmotorsports.com/suspension-information/
I don't like the design or engineering (if any) of these parts, but they would work.
4) Some FWD Cadillac rear hubs have been adapted to the '88 Fiero bearing housings: http://www.fiero.com/forum/Archives/Arch ... 6.html#p31
I suspect these aren't any stronger than Rodney's bearings, since they are subject to much of the same geometry limitations.
So back to #2...
The '88 Fiero front knuckle has an extremely limited hub bore size (~70mm) -- the '88 Fiero bearing is really the only one that fits in it. However, it's a generous amount of space for a bolt-on spindle.

Consider a straight spindle shaft like on the 1994-2004 Ford Mustang front knuckle:

These hub shafts accept a bearing/flange assembly with a 5x114.3 bolt pattern.

The hubs are relatively inexpensive ($50 to $90 including bearings) and are extremely durable. Wheels with the 5x114.3 pattern are common and available in a variety of offsets from ~30 up to 63mm.
A spindle could be fabricated which bolts into the '88 front knuckle and accepts the Mustang hub, or something similar. The only custom parts required would the bolt-on spindle itself and possibly a new brake caliper adapter. Obviously the rotors would have to be drilled for 5x114.3 as well, but that isn't a new operation since larger-than-stock rotors are probably already being used from another vehicle.