I agree SCR and a 7th injector would be the way to go for Dodge.
Harvey, does your oil change reminder come on before 7500 miles? If so then the ECM has calculated your fuel dilution to be at the max allowed level. While it may not have presented as an issue to you as a driver, fuel dilution is an issue on anything that regenerates without an added injector.
No, I thought about it years ago when I was new to TDR and learning everything I could. I concluded that for me, spending large sums of money for aftermarket equipment and having oil samples analyzed in order to continue running old oil with failed additive packages for 20 or 50 or even 100k miles as some posted of doing didn't make sense to me. I just change it and ignore it.
I've never had an oil sample done, never used anything but ordinary brand name dinosaur oil and Fleetguard filters, and always used a 10k service interval. If I was allowing harm to be done I never recognized the evidence in 325k miles on my first one, 230k on my second one, and 107k on my current one.
I haven't looked at the owner's manual for my truck in a long while so don't remember if it appeared to be specific for the C&C or generic. My truck was ordered in November or December '07 and delivered in early January '08.
I think Curtis's post above does a good job of explaining why extended oil service schedules allows my engine to perform satisfactorily and me to relax and avoid worry.
If your concern is based on fact I wonder why Cummins and Dodge were not sufficiently concerned to install or program an oil change monitor into the cab and chassis trucks.
You claim that cab and chassis trucks have the same issues as pickups and have the same ECM program that warns the driver of a need for oil change but two of us who own cab and chassis trucks, JGilbert and myself, have posted here that there is no such warning.