The impeller pieces would have to be pretty small to flush through. Assuming you have a BY2 engine after leaving the pump the raw water flows first through the transmission oil cooler first (called hydraulic oil cooler in the engine manual). This is very low on the starboard side, next to the oil pan. Next is the charge air cooler (turbo intercooler) where the raw water flows through small tubes. After leaving the charge air cooler the raw water enters the engine coolant heat exchanger, and again the raw water flows through small tubes. After leaving the heat exchanger the raw water enters the exhaust elbow for discharge through the muffler.
As Barry said see how the flow out the exhaust looks and watch the engine temperature, you may get lucky. My temp indicates hotter than he stated, at low RPM the engine temp will be in the mid to high 180s but at high power settings will be 200F or a little higher. This has been consistant since new. This also depends somewhat on raw water temperature. Note that the engine thermostat does not fully open until 205F (it starts to open at 190F), so even at 200F the thermostat is not letting the maximum flow of engine coolant through the heat exchanger.
Also keep in mind that everything has tolerences. Even though we have nice digital readout of engine temp with one degree resolution the sensor is just a resistor that varies resistance with temperature. According to the service manual when testing the sensor at 212F the allowable resistance is 120 to 170 ohms, quite a range and not precise! Once you know what is normal for your engine you can be aware of changes.
Howard