I was speaking with my local Yanmar dealer (Richmond Boat Works). He gave me some information that may be of interest to 2GM/3GMxxF owners.First, the major reason for changing your oil is not dirt but water in the oil. Most sailboats do not get enough hours annually to justify changing the oil because of dirt but water will cause damage. Our H'31 is a 1985 model and only has about 600-700 hours total (about 50 hours/year).Second when your engine is in neutral you should be able to open the throttle to FULL and the engine should be able to tach 4000-4200 (he was emphatic that this will NOT hurt the engine). The governor on the engine (when motoring) is actually the propeller. When you motor (transmission engaged) you should be able to get at least 3600 RPM at WOT(wide open throttle). This way when you motor at 70-80% of WOT you will get optimum fuel economy and will not cause coking of the mixing elbow. If your engine is NOT developing these RPM's you may need some adjustments and/or re-propping. The last thing he mentioned is that these engines should be able to outlive the average boat/owner. Properly maintained they should achieve 12,000-15,000 hours with routine maintenance. I do not know if these numbers apply to other Yanmars or not.