I spent an hour and a half in a racetrack pattern over the airfield for 1.5 hours at 2500 MSL at 75% power for 10 mins and WOT for 3 minutes in my O-320, as was the procedure set forth by the engine shop that did my 3 cylinders. I then landed, the mechanics spent about 30 minutes going over the engine looking for leaks or anything out of place. I then did a 40 minute cruise back to the home drome alternating 75% power and WOT, again at 2500 MSL. After that I did a 6.5 hour day in the air doing the same thing at 5.5, until I had to clear some mountains. 75% power for 10 ish, then WOT for 3 minutes. The first 1.5 I burned a quart. The second 1.5 I burned a quart. The third 1.5 I burned almost nothing. The fourth 1.5 I burned almost nothing. Did a 40 minute hop to the airport that did the engine, and they pulled the plugs. One still showed some oil on it, so still have to fly the crap out of the engine.
Last week I did another 5.5 hours and alternated between 2500 RPM and 2650 RPM whenever I thought about it. I added 1 quart at the end of the flight day. So burned about 1 quart in 7-8 hours, which I heard is about what it should be when oil consumption stabilizes. For all of this I was at or near full rich to keep the cylinders cool, as per the engine builder.
You will not go wrong with using the manufacturer's rules. There's a reason their instructions die hard... because they work good enough for the task for a long time, and FAR more accidents occur when people don't follow the manufacturer's instructions than accidents that happen due to FOLLOWING manufacturer's instructions.
But with engine break ins, it really seems like the best advice is... open that sucker up at low altitude, pour fuel into the engine to keep the cylinders cool, and find thick air to get the pressure in the cylinders as high as possible. Especially for the first couple of hours, pay close attention to the oil gauges. And if you're not gonna stick around the airport that did the work, plan a route that gives you plenty of options.