I've been away from the forum for a while. Thought I'd share my recent experience that will, unfortunately, have my 170 grounded for a long while.
After getting home from Oshkosh last month, I started an oil change that very evening. I was utterly shocked to find my oil screen was covered in metal! Long story short, the ring land of #1 cylinder was nearly disintegrated (yet the rings were all intact). Metal in all the bearings, engine is now completely disassembled for an early, and unbudgeted overhaul

That particular cylinder and piston were an exchanged overhaul assembly 173 hrs ago. The previous oil change 28 hrs prior showed only a few specs of metal, well within the general "ok" criteria. The only thing I had noticed in operation was that oil consumption had been increasing rather sharply. Spark plugs looked normal, but compression was down to 30/80 for that cylinder.
As a side note, after removing all the cylinders for disassembly, I also found that the #6 piston has a crack in the center of the skirt that extends all the way through the bottom ring

I think I'm through with overhauled cylinder assemblies. You just don't know how many hours any of the components have unless you have the means to track them from new.
Also, I'll be installing an oil filter system when this is all over, as it certainly can only help. With the amount of metal that ended up in my pan, however, I doubt that any filter system could have prevented this repair, only reduced the amount of damage.
I posted this pic of the oil screen on the 170 Facebook site when it happened. It turned into a real shouting match over the merits of filters and oil analysis. Social media... Go figure.