Keep in mind that your fuel consumption will be highly dependent of variables, some of which you control, some of which you can't. Fuel consumption for a monohull is greatly impacted by your speed through the water (and hence rpm) As you approach "hull speed" for your boat it takes more and more power (and thus fuel) to go incrementally faster until you throttle up to max rpm. Throw in hull and prop fouling, current etc and it gets complicated.
My Hunter 40.5 LOA with a 33.33 ft LWL (Length at the Water Line) has a theoretical Hull Speed of about 8.08 Knots.
My calculated fuel burn at normal cruising 2500 rpm (from Yanmar 4JH2E Performance charts) is .99 gph and the actual measured speed achieved with a clean hull and prop is 6.5 kts with a calculated range of 232 NM on 35 gal of fuel (40 gal tank with 5 gal held in reserve) Lots of variables like clean hull, current, headwind etc can effect this.
At 3300 rpm, my calculated fuel burn is 2.08 gph but my speed only increases to 7.6 kts and my range is only 128 NM.
So, you can see that how you operate your boat and how consistent you are in operating is important in using the fuel burn rate to calculate volume. You should log every time you put in fuel, generally how you have operated (like cruised for X hours at Y RPM etc) so you can hone in on calculating your fuel used vs operating hours. Keep good logs on this or a separate fuel log. I do that and I also have an "engine performance table" I created that shows a lot of data.
Sorry, I'm an Engineer and a "Marine Engineer" to boot plus a Navy Nuc so I'm am a little too anal about these kinds of things. You'll have to excuse me
