During the runs after the oil changes, i need to run 80% of WOT?
Run at 80% as a rule, not always but out in the open 80%. If sitting at the dock idling in neutral after the first oil change, the engine is set at 800 RPM. If out by a mile, set the low speed. Which reminds me, look in the download section on this site to find the service manual for your engine. No guarantees but it SHOULD be there.
I will do this. My first diesel so I don't know what clean diesel oil looks like. Should I assume after 3rd full oil change it would be reasonably clean?
Not necessarily. Just depends on how the used oil looks as you change the oil. If you can run it around 3K and the oil is reasonably clean, you've eliminated all crap.
REMEMBER : after about 10 hours of running time, you will see the oil is black and opaque. An exact match for road tar in colour. No need for a heart attack. This is NORMAL and will stay like that until you reach 100 hrs. and ready for another oil change. Same for me when I had "0" hours on my engine.
I can think of nothing worse for a diesel engine.
Why is this?
For excessive hours of idling or running a diesel far below 80%, this is a recipe for trouble over the long haul. The general thought from the course I took and books I've read, the prevailing idea is that, as mentioned here, the engine is designed to run at a given RPM for several benefits.
When the engine runs below that speed, after many hours, the exhaust valve is not seeing the desired HP scouring gasses when it opens and the valve and its seat become coated with carbon. This carbon acts as an insulator and the valve is not cooled properly by thermal conduction into the block. This causes the hot valve to become cut by high pressure gasses and leaks around the seat during the power stroke. This further cuts the valve. The cylinder then sees lower pressure and lower temp. air on the compression stroke so poorer combustion results during the power stroke.
A vicious circle at its finest.
One of the worst things you will see is the idiots who come down to run their engines at idle during the winter. What they are actually doing is creating water vapour which condenses in the oil to produce sulphuric acid which works its magic on all the metal parts in the engine. The engine expects to be run until it is hot so the water is driven off. All by design.