Great thread magicalbill started,
I suppose I do not have to push my engine like the rest of you sea bearing sailors, but I like to cruise at 4000-4200RPM. I am frugal when it comes to fuel burn.
Thanks for you that said you will push the envelope to get rid of carbon.
A final thought on this, you mostly have Yammies, and I have a Honda. The Coast Guard use Honda's and pretty comfortable saying they push them hard at time and get 5000-6000 hours from the engines, so I think the new generation of engines have hiccups here and there, but they in general can take a beating for a long time.
Hey Lee; thanks, I was just curious for the most part.
My Grady Club had several 330's with F250's and they have to be spun above 4700 to run 30 MPH. That's underpowered to me, but it makes a strong case for long life even with hi RPM use, as many of those 250's clear 1000-1200 hrs and haven't even hiccupped.
As mentioned, I'm more conservative with my revs, and I just wanted to see what everyone else was doing.
Mr_mbuna has an interesting point, as I have 350's on my Marlin. Running them at 4300 keeps them out of flywheel degradation range. I usually can't run that setting as 4300 puts me at 39-40MPH and I seldom have a calm enough sea state for that speed. I also concur that above 4500, your really burning fuel. Above 5000 RPM I would suggest looking anywhere else but the fuel flow info.
Thanks again for all the input!