When I Pponk'd my 180, Flight Resources was pretty adamant about running a 2 blade (MTV-15) on anything under 300 hp. I wish people would quit using HP numbers without Torque numbers... but I digress
I ran a 2 blade on the Pponk (because I had one) for a few hundred hours. The weight loss up front does make it fly nice (and I am a stickler for having a nice CG without use of ballast to achieve it). But it was very evident to me that this was not enough prop for the engine. Speed difference was negligible as in almost nil.
I bought a 3 Blade (MTV-9) also from Flight Resources, before I had a home for the 2 blade, so I was able to do back to back tests flights, less than 30 minutes apart, to compare these props on
my airplane. At this point t I could have kept either, both, or none. I'm
not a fan boy, and know exactly how a Mac (C-66) performed on the same airplane, so it really didn't matter to me which I kept, if either, I just wanted the best all around compromise (because it's all a compromise) for my mission / airplane.
The take off difference between the two was a complete joke. I won't post numbers, because someone will call BS, but I would have been several thousand dollars ahead in keeping the 2 blade if it had any merit at all. Landing, the flight characteristics of the 2 blade may have made a difference in a STOL contest where +/- two feet would make a difference. Landing on my cross strip ~350', it makes none, I don't do STOL, and that is as tight as I ever will find a need to get my 180 in barring an emergency.
Flying with absolutely nothing in the baggage, and no rear seats, the 2 blade flies nicer. Anything at all in the baggage (as little as a couple wrenches and a qt of oil) and the difference is completely (do the math) gone.
In my way of thinking, there is really only one legitimate reason to upsize an engine on an airplane, and that is to turn an upsized prop. Installing a larger engine, and then governing it with an under pitched, or in the case of CS props under sized prop, makes no sense to me?
In the end it all comes down to mission. Total weight, as well as real world CG are most certainly factors a guy oughta consider, so I guess if your airplane or mission are out of 'normal' balance enough to require a minimalistic approach to prop selection you're probably going to be hard pressed to find something lighter that pulls as well as a 2 blade MT. On the other hand, a 3 blade MT weighs in at almost the exact weight of a 2 blade Mac, with thrust almost as good as a 3 blade Mac, and in some regimes better. There is a
6lb difference between the two MT's, and either is going to be much much lighter than your current prop.
Again, do the math. Look at the arm on the prop, and the arm on your baggage, it is a 6lb difference.... That doesn't amount to much baggage

.
Take care, Rob