1) Four stroke engines don't need SeaFoam treatment to begin with unless it happens to be an oil burner or perhaps sees extremely long periods of idle or low speed operation. Again, regular use of a decarb agent at recommended levels can help control this.
2) Carbon is an inert substance and very stubborn to remove so use of a product like SeaFoam in even very heavy concentrations is simply not an issue. The OP has a 175 HP engine which I will gather is sucking fuel from a 30 gallon tank or larger. Two cans of SeaFoam in 8 gallons is not a heavy concentration. On a percentage basis my small engines should have blown up long ago as they periodically get treated to heavy concentrations. My truck with 134,00 on the clock and my car with 105,00 have a regular diet of the stuff. Not for carbon removal but for fuel system cleanliness. Keep a clean fuel system and you will likely have less of a carbon problem. I've seen engines blown for lots of reasons, but never for use of a decarb agent in any concentration. That doesn't mean it hasn't happened, but then one never gets the full story either. Sort of like blaming ethanol for the worlds ills. I guess you either believe in the stuff or you don't. The OP wanted an opinion and he got mine. One takes it or leaves it. I'm a believer and have used the stuff religiously since Hector was a pup.