... I'm sort of leaning toward the advice of the experts that write for the TDR. specifically;
https://www.turbodieselregister.com/Issues/IO57_LubeOilAnalysisII.pdf
Perhaps you should read the article a little more closely. If you do, you'll note that the authors did not test the standard 15W40 Amsoil diesel & marine lube, which is the weight prescribed for our engines. You'll also note that they tested only oils; they did not test other filters, especially Amsoil's full-flow filters or bypass filters.
It is your opinion that 6K oil changes are the only way to go, like it is my opinion that if one uses Amsoil lubes, full-flow filtration and bypass filtration one need only change the filters and add makeup oil to replenish the additives whilst employing periodic analysis to keep tabs on the engine's condition. If you are right, then long-haul truckers cannot ever possibly get 500K miles out of an oil change and every one who has claimed to do so must, therefore, be telling less than the full truth.
Folks who write for TDR are not necessarily experts, and they almost always inject their opinions into their musings. The articles had lots of pretty numbers, but were lacking data in a number of relevant areas. Were I to rate these articles on an informative-to-entertaining scale, I'd have to put the balance on the entertaining side of the scale. The articles left more questions for the informed layman than they answered. I didn't think the articles were all they were cracked up to be when I first read them, and I still don't think they're cracked up to be all that much.
It is not 'simply true' that synthetics can be run for twice the distance/time.
not. If you've come to expect your *oil* to remove sludge and soot from your engine, then you are sadly misinformed. A good oil's additive package will keep soot in suspension; preventing it from clumping together prevents it from causing rapid damage to your engine. A good oil's additive package has a high total base number (TBN) which both *prevents* sludge from forming in the first place and loosens sludge that has built up inside the engine.
Extending oil change intervals is a gamble only if one chooses not to learn about the factors involved. Can one simply pour in synthetic lube and continue using ordinary full-flo filters? Sure, if one doesn't want the engine to last very long. However, if one were to learn about lubes and filtration, one might just learn that oil does not go bad; it is only that additives become depleted over time, that filters clog up, that full-flow filters do not remove the smallest particles that can cause damage to your engine's bearings and wear surfaces. If one endeavors to learn, one might find that it only takes a quart or two of fresh oil to replenish needed additives in the engine's lube, that quality bypass filtration removes particles from the oil that are larger than the oil-bearing cushion, that quality bypass filtration can remove a number of other contaminants.
I'm not starting another oil war here on TDR; this is my last (only?) post in this thread. If y'all haven't yet guessed, these are my opinions, offered to entice you to do your own research. You readers' trucks are yours; only *you* can decide how to maintain them. By the same token, it is your responsibility to determine how you should best maintain your vehicle. It is your choice to maintain 1K, 3K, 6K, 10K or 25K oil changes or to never drain the oil. I may give a good-natured, 'Tsk, tsk' if one chooses 3K oil changes, but I always openly agree that maintenance is one's own choice.