Tuesdak, do you have a fleet? Just want to clarify if you are changing oil weekly due to having a fleet or every six months on one truck. Not trying to be a wise guy here. I can agree that oil analysis is the way to go. Sold them to my customers for 17 years before I retired. The real benefit of using oil analysis comes with doing it each and every oil change and being able to see trending. Yes, you can use it one time to diagnose a coolant leak, fuel dilution, or other potentially catastrophic event, but it is far more useful when it is done each and every drain to develop "trending". Fact is, only the most astute will do oil analysis. Most just discard the idea as too expensive or do not want to do it because they do not know how to read and understand a report (and it is not easy to do without a good amount of knowledge and training).
I suggest not limiting searches for oils to auto parts stores or the big box stores. Remember that oil marketers will most often sell to the public and can be nearby. I also recommend keeping a reasonable supply on hand. I do not recommend buying drums of oil if you only have one vehicle that you only put 20K on per year. The oil will degrade with time in the drum and will not be the product that it was when new. I agree that the price of oil (fuel and everything else that we need) is artificially high right now. But it hasn't always been. Perhaps we can correct that at a next election? But, I wasn't trying say that it was inexpensive. Just that it it far "cheaper" to change the oil than it is to rebuild an engine.
I respect your point of view. Always buy larger package styles, that lowers the cost per gallon. Personally, I tired of the pails. Its a bit of a hassle to hoist one over the fender and transferring to 1 gal or 2.5 gal jugs is a PITA. Plus my worn out shoulders just will not put up with it. Do oil analysis. Seek expert guidance on it if you do not completely understand how to read the report. This will also save you money by no doing work that is not needed. And, yes, this is the only safe way to extend drain intervals. Manufacturer drain intervals are the only thing that I ever recommended to my customers unless they were using oil analysis to monitor oil condition. I never recommend that drain intervals be extended just because oil X states that they can go a bajillion miles between drain. Doing this is suicidal. Chose the oil that you feel the most comfortable with. Major brands and many, many independent brands meet spec. Do your homework. Some are a bit better than others. I changed from one major to another with great results after 150k or so miles. I would never go back. Not saying that I might not change again.
And finally, these trucks are like our children. Ultimately, we each raise our own and do what we feel is best for them. We are all experts and we share our ideas here. Each of us will do what we feel is the best for our truck taking into consideration all of the variables that effect our lives.
And, don't forget that its all about the smiles to the miles.
Keep Your Powder Dry.