First of all 1600 calories at a bodyweight of 227 seems awfully low. That's like 7x your bodyweight and most people consider 10x bodyweight as being the lowest you should go. Be careful not to shutdown your metabolism with this method or your fat loss will stall and you can't feasibly go any lower in calories.
As far as doing well on moderate carb diets, 99% of the people on here would do well if they'd just stick to it. Problem is people want instant gratification while dieting and when you low carb you lose water fast. A lot of people can lose 5-8 pounds the first week of a lowcarb diet and then they're hooked. If they tried a moderate carb diet for a week and they didn't lose that much weight they assume the diet sucks for them and go back to low carb. Unfortunately they don't realize that those 5-8 pounds of water will come back the instant they eat carbs again and nothing can stop it.
If I were you I'd keep protein and carbs the same but up your fat to 80-100 grams. If you want a good all around moderate carb diet, I'd suggest either an Iso-caloric(33/33/33) or something like a 40/30/30(p/c/f). These are great and I guarantee the majority of people would do quite well on it if they'd just give it a chance. I've tried just about every concievable diet(not counting shit like slim-fast and the cabbage soup diet) and I always seem to come back to a moderate carb diet. Right now I'm getting about 100g carbs timed around workouts, 80-100g fat and about 260g protein. I refeed once per week and am doing quite well. I've done CKD, TKD, you name it and while they all work they aren't magical just a different means to the same end. I seem to have better workouts in the gym with more carbs in my system let alone I don't crave them as much when I am able to enjoy some each day. This type of diet also has less rebound because you already are eating carbs so it isn't a shock for your body to see them again and you are already holding more water than if you were completely devoid of carbs.
The one benefit that low carb diets do have is appetite suppression. Fat is very satiating and when you eat a lot of it you will feel fuller than if you were eating a lot of carbs. The problem is however that once you go back to carbs it will stimulate hunger and that can lead to binging.