If you change your oil often enough you can actually go without an oil filter. Ford did a study that revealed particles, that can cause damage, do not develop in oil, up to around 5k miles in automobile engines. And, automobile engines are a better breeding ground for this kind of contamination than our Valkyrie engines, not to mention that the study is old and well before, better oils were available.
So, with this study in mind, if you change your oil regularly, and often enough, the only reason you need a filter is to absorb the water that condenses in the oil, and that is to say the filter needs changing only occasionally, maybe every three or four oil changes.
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That wouldn't surprise me. Modern engines are built so precisely that I'm sure very little metal ever ends up in the oil. In fact, the 2 VW Beetles from the 1960s I used to own actually had no oil filter at all! Of course, they usually needed a rebuild by 50,000 miles.
I would be curious if sharing engine oil with the transmission and clutch adds to the contamination. The Ford test surely didn't cover that scenario. I think the new DCT Wing has a second oil filter, and I suspect the dual clutch setup has much to do with that.