Its the way weve always done it too Bob, great success.
We go a little further, fire-it up in the chassis if possible. Go almost wide open, let off and allow the engine breaking to bring us back down, do it again, hit the gas get it at a high RPM, let off and allow the engine breaking to bring it back down. This is the method we do three consecutive times and shout it down. NEVER LET IT IDLE and stay at a constant RPM for ore than a second or too, and carb sync is after breakin....If new cam, run 20 min above 2k. Always add ZINC as Richard mentioned too......
We then let it cool, start the process again with longer rpm duration's and now 5 incremental and off throttle breaking times. Once it cools this time, we change oil. Reason for this is that most particles will now be loose and do not want these rotating through cylinder walls, crank, so on.... Ive done this with all my new cars, changed oil after 20 miles of new.
Yes, thats just 20 MILES!!! Dealer once thought i was a nut and had a bet .I said it would pour glitter at the end of the drain on a 2011 Tundra with 18 miles, they said I was nuts. Up it went on their lift, they drained it and when the pour turned to a trickle, it was glittering from metal flake that would have gone through the system until the filter caught it. .....
This procedure instead of a heat sync has given us the highest compression, longer lasting, and NO blow by in any engine, even toys like snowmobiles, motorcycles and so on. Heres a link to a guy that explains it too.
https://www.mototuneusa.com/break_in_secrets.htm
Somewhat off topic, but aircraft piston engines absolutely must be broken-in at full power, full rich, at low (as possible) altitudes and for extended times (an hour or more). This is so you get max BMEP and the rings will seat; if you don't do it this way you're all but guaranteed to have low compression (and will likely void the rebuilder's warranty). Some resort to putting Bon Ami in the cylinder in an attempt to break the glaze. If you have CHTs (cylinder head temperature gauges) you will see the temps rise to scary levels for a few minutes, then come down quickly as the rings seat. They're run full rich to purposely wash oil off the cylinder walls to assist "final machining."
This is a religious topic, but my dad who was an auto shop instructor and factory rep for Ford says "break them in how you're going to drive them." Others say "break them in slow, get a slow engine." One thing that does make sense to me is if you baby an engine for too long you'll get a ridge at the top of ring travel, then when you finally punch it the rings may hit the ridge and possibly be damaged. Modern engines are so precisely machined that usually no specific break-in is required.