Some more factors to consider:
1) You will have to apply some statistical analysis to your results to define minimum performance. This is done on the basis of standard deviations based on the scatter which you see from specimen to specimen. This also depends on how many samples you took and the target audience for your products.
As an example, for civil aerospace applications, the JAR (joint air regs) are quite specific about relating the number of test specimens to the statistical methods which should be used for castings. It is also worth looking at MIL-spec equivalents. I'm sorry but I don't have details to hand.
As a simple rule of thumb if you are not tied down by any particular legislation then do the following. For each S-N point on your test curves, determine the statistical mean stress and standard deviation stress (sigma). Then subtract 3xsigma from your mean stress. This means that roughly 99.9% of your components will have this fatigue strength.
2) On top of this there is another factor. Fatigue tests are usually done to failure (or close to failure). A tiny crack will have started well before this number of cycles. A widely used rule of thumb is that 2/3 of the cycles are used to initiate the crack and 1/3 of the remaining cycles to grow the crack to failure. This, once you have factored for stress as in 1) you also need to factor the number of cycles down by 2/3.
3) I'm not familiar with the RR moore test. If it has no stress concentration feature (KT=1) then all is well because this is the most commonly used type. You can get into fatiguing stress concentration features like holes (KT=3) but these components will show greater life (based on hole concentrated stress not bulk stress) than plain components stressed to the same level.
This approach is called "Safe Life" design. You should make it clear in any product literature that the curves which you produce are design curves not raw test curves.
Again, it very much depends on your target audience but check out the JAR's, they are very good at detailing what you need to do for castings.
Hope this adds useful food for thought.
Regards,
gwolf.