As you'll see in that Pascoe article, the longevity of these 92's comes down to what horsepower they're set up at. I've got 500hp 6v92's in my 45c, and my mechanic estimates I'll get about 3000-3500 hours before needing a top overhaul again IF I can run the boat at least 150-200 hrs./yr.
550 hp is a very common rating for 6v92's, and the time between overhaul drops to 1200-1500 hrs.
Be very mindful of what injectors are in those holes, too...with everyone's preoccupation with speed these days, a lot of people will put oversized injectors in to boost hp a little. That'll definitely shorten life. Hosing more fuel in (especially without doing anything more to boost airflow like pumping up turbos to take advantage of the extra fuel flow) just washes oil off the tops of the cylinders. On 6v92's, that starts to happen right over the 500hp mark, my mechanic says. When he rebuilt my motors, he told me that the old owner had oversized injectors in there. For the sake of maybe 15-20hp gained, it dropped life by half. Plus, there was a lot of unburnt fuel that crudded up the transom and left a visible hazy cloud behind the boat on calm days. Honestly, we never saw any decrease in speed; I took maybe an inch of pitch out of my props, and amazingly, the boat's probably faster now than it was before.
Some claim the 2-stroke Detroits are a somewhat dirty motor -- I disagree. There's no question 4-strokes (especially modern ones) will more completely burn at higher cruising rpms, but when these Detroits are set up with the right injectors you don't get any visible emissions. AND, they are absolutely smoke-free at low rpms. Watch boats with MANs, MTUs, Cats, etc. in the idle speed zones, and every one of them will have some visible fuel smoke around the transom. For fishing and slow cruising, I'll take Detroits any day. The reality is we all spend plenty of time at slow speed.