So here's the story. I have a 08 2500 Megacab, 6.7, Smarty S-67, with deletes, 51,000 miles (doesn't get driven as much as i want). Last month after about a hour drive, i pull off the highway with 2 trouble codes and a BAD KNOCKING sound. I am less than 2 miles from my destination so when i get there i track down the trouble codes- Cranckcase filter restriction x2. After a few phone calls, and a speedy driveway oil and filter change the decision is made to drive it back home. No loss of power, no loss of oil pressure, no overheating- less than 200 degrees all the way. Basically i get it to the mechanic later that week and find the #6 piston is melted, the connecting rod is blue from the heat on the piston end, and the wrist pin is seized in the piston. The heat damage is mainly to the bottom of the piston, and up to the rings, the top shows no injector related damage, nor extreme heat damage. The injectors were checked prior to the tear down and only #4 shows to be less than 100%. During the engine tear down, 2 pieces of rubber are found inside the oil journal of the crank on #6. Baffled my mechanic said they could have only got there from the factory. I don't see Cummins having this problem, and after we look them over much closer i believe they are remnants or scrap from a OIL FILTER GASKET. Since i have changed the oil every time and none of the gaskets have ever been damaged, a couple have stuck to the engine once the filter was off-but half of them do that, i believe the ONLY other way this could have entered the engine would be for these scraps to be inside the filter prior to being placed on the engine. I have used Fram filters on every oil change, and Rotella 15-40. This is my 3rd Ram with a Cummins and have NEVER had any engine issues. My theory on this is i changed the oil earlier in the summer, this is when the scrap got into the engine. I occasionally pull a trailer with a tractor, the weight is about 10,000#. I hadn't pulled this tractor since that last oil change, therefore hadn't "worked" the engine to that heat level, a lot of the miles on that truck are empty and highway miles, and when i did pull the tractor in the end of November i was in a hurry, not foot to the floor, but definitely pouring the fuel to it. This is when the piston got hot and the damage started. I had 2 shorts trips after that tractor day, then an hour driving at highway speeds 70-80.....boom. I have the filter than was removed and it has not been "cut" or opened yet, however i believe that whatever was in the filter fell into it at Fram's factory and would therefore no longer be in it anyway. Here are some pictures, the rubber scrap has a distinct curve and a couple flat sides consistent with a filter gasket, the thickness is also exact. Any opinions on how to get my $6500.00 back from Fram? Any other ideas where this may have come from?