I don't get the "carbon in the oil". If oil goes past the piston rings or valve seals, oil is burnt. It is not the gas that goes past the rings; it is the oil that goes past the rings. The force of the explosion forces the piston downwards, and the piston creates pressure in the crankcase. Does really exhaust gases go to the crankcases? Or the smoke is just from the hot oil smouldering?
Back to the oil, it is true that heavy particles sediment in the oil sump. Would the oil warming help in getting rid of them? I don't think so. The oil pan in my CB350 was full of sludge. But the oil pump is far away from it. No warming will make that sludge go to the oil pump. I get the "orange juice" example, but unless you lift your bike and vigorously shake it up and down, left and right, like a juice bottle, no oil circulation will help you dissolve the sludge in the bottom of the oil sump. Like if you drink the juice with a straw that only goes halfway in the bottle. No matter what the juice temperature is, if you stir the juice you will only stir and heat the upper layers, not the lower sediments.
Specially when there is some kind of "labyrinth" for the oil to help keep the oil level whatever the vehicle tilt is. Oil doesn't flow smoothly, it goes around a labyrinth, speed is reduced and the sediments will stay there for decades, whatever the oil temperature is.
More "conventional wisdom": What about bird#$%* in the paint? Is it really that corrosive? Has somebody first-hand experience of faded paint due to bird #$%*? Swallows #$%* in my air conditioner external unit, the guano stays there for months and gets cleaned with the rain and I haven't noticed any difference in the paint. And we are talking a single layer of paint in an air conditioner, not the candy + colour`+ lacquer. Is the bird#$%* a myth of the conventional wisdom or there is truth in it? What's the difference between bird and human "residues"? Why should the bird residue be more corrosive than any other animal's?
Another example of "conventional wisdom". How many of you cut the plastic rings that keeps the six-packs together? You are very environment-conscious so you are avoiding some poor fish getting caught in this improvised net. Now think for a second where your garbage go. Do you think for a second that the garbage truck dumps your garbage to the ocean? It gets separated in its very first stage -we in Spain have different containers for plastics, paper, glass etc. And each type of residue goes to a different recycling plant. Irrespective of the plastic rings being cut or not, it will be recycled and will only see fish if it gets the form of a inflatable raft.