In my 'running' experience, I've found engines with jammed-shut relief valves showing about 70-74 PSI oil pressure (cold, never tested one hot) with 20w50 oil and have heard of 80 PSI once in a while. This normally happened on the K1 and earlier versions when the pump base casting warped a little bit and jammed the relief valve shut, and I didn't see any of them myself until well into the 1990s - they can also jam open in this situation, resulting in very low oil pressure below 4000 RPM.
The too-high oil pressure causes extra flow that shows up across the front of the valve cover's gasket as wetness (with correspondingly low oil tank levels and extra-deep crankcase levels, making other weeps), weeps around the valve-adjuster caps from too much spray, and in one roadrace engine, 'washout points' in the plain bearings of the crankshaft around their oil ports. This looks like a tiny funnel was cut into the oil holes where the flow enters the bearing. I was told (but never have seen) that if left alone to have this much pressure it would eventually 'wash out' the plain bearings, whatever that means?