While I do respect Your opinion somewhat, having been a pro mechanic, My own experience with oil has been that the rest of the vehicle wears out long before the oil lubed engine parts even if You use cheap oil & filters.
2 years ago I had to stop running My '85 Dodge mini van with a 2,2 & carb. I t rolled down a hill in the back yard & hit a tree. That van had about 285K on it, leaked oil & trans fluid pretty bad but didn't smoke. The oil pressure was normal & cylinders looked good, still some hone marks [I had replaced the head gasket many times, one not real long before the crash]. I used chaep Unilab oil from Dollar General, an the cheapest filter Pep Boys had, and changed both once per year most of the years I owned it.
The car I had before that was an '81 Honda Civic 1.5 L. I ran that car 142 k before I parked it due to lack of use. While there was some peculiar wear on 1 lobe of the cam, it smoothed itself up and never became an issue. I had noticed it at about 60K when changing the cam cover gasket. I would add 1 quart to that engine at 6K miles, then change it at about 12K when it was 1 quart low again.
Before the Honda I had a '65 Falcon I got from Mom & Dad when I turned 16. It had over 100K on it then, and I ran it another 40K. I think in the early days We ran Penzoil 10-30 in it, later Sears Spectrum 10-40. This one was changed more regularly, no lube related issues other than valve guide wear, probably should have pulled the seals off the valves.
My sailboat has a Peugot Diesel in it, it has about 10K hours on it. One cylinder liner & piston are all scarred up, a glow plug burnt out through the side of the tube, putting debris in the cylinder. I ran it about 5K hours with it that way, it has blow-by & leaks oil pretty bad. I did always use a diesel rated mineral based oil in this engine, and changed it and the filter [Purolator] twice a year. I think that if that glow plug had not failed, this engine would be fine, but it didn't run that bad in spite of itself. I have not used the boat in the last 7 years due to having cancer.
I had a '69 GTO back in the day too, it had been run hard before I got it, and I ran it hard too. I used the Sears Spectrum which Sears claimed WAS a premium oil back then in it too. I gave up muscle cars in the '79 gas crunch & sold it in '84. It had about 100K on it with no lube related issues, but I believe it did have a bad valve by the time I sold it.
Back in the "Old Days" car engines usually only lasted 100-150K miles no matter what was used in them, or how frequently changed, so the GTO, Falcon & Honda lasted about as good as anybody's engine.
Those of You running gas engines might pay attention to this:
Phosphorus (a component of ZDDP - Zinc Dialkyl-Dithio-Phosphate) is the key component for valve train protection in an engine and 1600ppm (parts per million) used to be the standard for phosphorus in engine oil. In 1996 the EPA forced that to be dropped to 800ppm and then more recently (2004?) to 400ppm - a quarter of the original spec. Valvetrains and their components are not especially cheap to replace and this drop in phosphorus content has been a problem for many engines (especially those with flat-tappet type cams). So why was the level dropped? Money. Next to lead, it's the second most destructive substance to shove through a catalytic converter. The US government mandated a 150,000 mile liftime on catalytic converters and the quickest way to do that was to drop phosphorous levels and bugger the valvetrain problem. Literally.
Read more:
http://www.carbibles.com/engineoil_bible.html#ixzz17IGcOpgmTurns out the latest & greatest gas engine oil may not be so great.