The filtration question is interesting. I was lucky with my A, which had a semi-clean sludge trap after about 30K miles in my hands, plus whatever the previous bloke had done (not much probably). That also had b/e journals within spec and a good t/s bush & journal, still at 1.5 thou clearance. It didn't have a return side after-market filter, also ran on 20/50 and was changed every 1000 miles. So I just fitted new shells, rod nuts etc and away she went and still does - at close to the same mileage again. It seldom did trips shorter than 20 miles, and mostly was run for a few hours, with stops, when taken out. I think that is one key to longevity, but whether it affects sludge build-up particularly, rather than just condensation levels, bore wear and so on, I'm not sure.
By comparison, my AMC twins are fitted with a (primitive) feed-side filter system, involving a replaceable and cleanable felt / mesh item in a chamber across the crankcases just inboard of the (separate) supply-side oil pump. That filter comes out for a good clean every oil change, or every other at worst. There is always some small amount of debris embedded in the felt - tiny bits of aluminium, other specks of whatever. If I added all that up over, say, 30 oil changes, it would probably be 'quite a lot' although the amount inevitably decreases after the first few thousand miles following a rebuild. Were the debris NOT in the filter, it would presumably find somewhere else to park itself - in the oilways or the tank. Those cranks have screwed-in c/sunk 0BA plugs to allow access for cleaning the oil passages (but no trap as such) and a clean-out is naturally a 'should do' when things are apart.
However, I haven't ever seen enough to worry about in any of the cranks I've run with. One of the engines has done several hundred thousand miles now and still does a few thousand every year. Some of the real experts with these things reckon on 60K miles between bottom end rebuilds, although I have usually pulled them down as a preventative at about 40K in an effort to preserve the cranks, which, like A10 ones, don't exactly grow on trees.
I therefore wonder whether the ultimate answer to cleanliness and long life would lie in having a proper pressure-side filter system. The AMC one is, as I say, primitive, but better than nothing. There was a marque specialist who redesigned the supply side of his and some other folks' AMC twin engines to allow the incorporation of modern cartridge filters on the feed side via external plumbing and crankcase mods, but it was complicated. Was it, would it be, could it be, worth it, even if it were possible? Could a Beesa pump handle it? And would it reduce the sludge thing anyway?
Dunno at all, but it's something more interesting to ponder of a shite wet morning than the state of the nation . . .