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The "motoman" break in method basically means high cylinder pressure so that the gas that gets behind the compression rings has as much pressure as possible to push the rings outward and into the cylinder walls. This makes them seal better than light pressure from a light load while they break in. The principle would apply to any engine with piston rings. I know for a fact the diesels engines suffer from cylinder wall "glazing" if they are not run under sufficient load often, so a hard break in makes good sense to me on a diesel.
The Caterpillar diesels in my boat get loaded up with crud if I don't run them hard every few hours. When I cruised the Erie Canal, I had to go <10 MPH for 180 or so miles on the western half and I was unable to load the engines the entire time. We I got to Lake Oneida, I throttled up and left a massive cloud of gray smoke (it was expected) in my wake as the engines cleared themselves out. I always run them at 80% load for a few minutes at the start and end of every cruising segment if I can. My owner's manual says to do that too.