"Gary how many miles do you go before you change your toilet paper
I have the same filter Thanks"
I prefer to replace about every 2000 miles in my mostly-towing use - the oil is usually starting to get pretty dark by then, and the new TP element cleans it up really well, and the added quart of replacement oil keeps my additive package in the Delo up in the good numbers...
Geez, if you're adding a quart every 2000 miles, you should never have to change oil!

In 22,000 miles, you'll have changed the 11 quarts in the engine! My gosh, you should be able to run indefinitely! We had a client do this with a Suburban but he went 5000 on standard filters and a Suburban only has 5 quarts of oil. He sold the truck with 375,000 never having actually changed the oil, just changed the oil filter and added a quart. Before he sold it, the truck was PM'd by the dealership and compression was within 2% of new specs.
The new trucks should be able to go 10,000 easy UNLESS you let the truck idle for extended periods, only run 5 mile trips between start and stop, or only run on dusty roads.
I use an Oilguard on my 96 and could probably run 50,000 to 100,000 if I wanted to although I choose to run 25,000 or once a year with RP 15W40. Oil is cheap but adding a quart every 2,000 sounds like more hassle - then having to dispose of an oil saturated TP roll - that doesn't sound all too environmentally sensitive or green (waste oil in ground water, trees for TP, energy to propose and market all of that)
Just kidding guys. Do whatever oil change makes you guys feel good about your truck. There is no one right or wrong, only what's appropriate for each individual.
For warranty, change your filter at the 7500 or sooner time frame and how would the dealer know whether you changed the oil every other time unless you told them? If the oil causes the failure (unlikely, oil fails due to fuel dilution, coolant contamination, dirt, or lack of oil [insufficient oil level] - all of which are not failures of the oil, but failures of mechanical components in the engine), then the oil manufacturer should stand behind the product.
Cheers,