The only thing I would question is the date of that study... I see two things that imply its old:
* The reference to a 60u fullflow, when modern filters are typically around 20u to 30u, and;
* The reference to the "750 cu in" bypass which is likely the "Motorguard 750" or the "Fleetguard 750", which are physically huge and around the capacity of our entire sump.
Not sure the age of the document means much, other than oil filtration, engine durability, fuel quality, and oil quality have greatly improved greatly within the past few years.
I still stand by my earlier statement, I doubt many of us even get soot loading, let alone enough soot to damage parts. And further, an engine will still wear even if all the soot is eliminated.
I still think back to those guys with over 500k without a bypass and with nothing more than routine oil changes... soot is an issue (in our application) how? While there are a few of "us" that probably do get soot loading (those that are in the high HP brackets or otherwise dumping loads of fuel into the cylinders), the majority of us don't.