this puts higher temp in the heater for given amount of heating to the board.
I.e., with a lower air flow, you would generally need to turn the temp higher to get the solder to flow.
Take the extreme example of zero air flow, and the heater is just sitting in a small enclosed airspace. It can maintain 350C with very minimal power, maybe a few watts. But it doesn't heat the board up, at all. Once the air starts flowing, the current draw has to jump up to keep the heater at the same set temp.
So ignoring the numbers on the display, because they don't do the soldering, with lower airflow you will generally end up turning the knob higher to do the same job in the same amount of time.
It's the absolute temperature, not the amount of current draw, which kills the heater. If we blow enough cool air over it, we can run it at triple the max current and it will last for years. This is why the 858D has the autoshutdown routine which runs air past the heater.... even after the current draw is zero.