And absolute wear numbers in a UOA mean NOTHING. Some engines give great wear numbers no matter what you use....like a Honda 4-cylinder. You can run oil from a deep fryer in those engines and it's gonna give you a real nice UOA. Just kidding of course. (You have to say that on here)
Other engines give higher wear numbers no matter what oil or additives you throw at it. Some oils give lower numbers for these engines, but they are ALWAYS WAY HIGHER than the above mentioned Honda 4-cylinder, for example.
It's not the absolute number that matters in terms of wear numbers....but a comparison or trend of wear numbers in the same engine with different oils. And then to make it more complicated, not all engines of the same make, wear the same. Some give higher, some lower even with the same oil.
And to make UOA's even seem more pointless for determining how great an oil is when looking at wear numbers.....compare an engine that typically throws higher wear numbers driven 95% highway versus the same engine that's used to take kids to school and go grocery shopping (short trips).