ivymike,
You may be correct in your statement about the contact between cam and follower being mixed regime conditions for part of a valve lift event, for some engines. Whether the sliding contact is boundary, mixed, elastohydrodynamic, or full hydrodynamic conditions depends upon many variables, and each regime is generally defined by the dynamic oil film thickness versus surface asperity heights of the two mating surfaces (ie. usually referred to as the Lambda ratio). I don't know why an engineer would intentionally design a non-oscillatory, sliding contact that did not always operate under hydrodynamic conditions, since it is normally easy enough to accomplish. But maybe it has to do with manufacturing costs or packaging constraints. Who knows?
Highly viscous oils and smooth parts with low surface asperity heights will be able to maintain hydrodynamic contact under higher loads than parts with a rougher surface using less viscous oils. But smooth surfaces cost more to produce, and engines like low viscosity oils to maximize efficiency.
Parts having full hydrodynamic contact should have zero wear as long as there are no corrosive elements present in the oil, there are no debris particles present in the oil that are larger than the contact zone hydrodynamic film thickness, the part surfaces have adequate surface compressive fatigue strength and sub-surface shear fatigue strength for the local dynamic fluid film pressures produced, and the oil film contact temps never exceed the flash temp capability of the oil which would lead to film breakdown and scuffing.
The reason some oils use EP additives like ZDTP, is to provide an extra margin of safety in case mixed or boundary contact occurs. These EP additives work by creating a surface oxide layer on the parts that prevents local diffusion bonding between the mating surface asperity tips when they locally contact (ever try to weld parts that had dirty or oxidized surfaces?). As these asperity tips bond together and then snap apart during their brief moment of contact, over the course of millions of load cycles, they slowly transfer material from one part surface to another and this results in the classic surface pitting and smearing that you see in failed rotary bearing surfaces. EP additives like ZDTP work well in gear oils, but they have properties that are detrimental when used in engine oils.
As I noted in my previous post, a DLC coating would only help under boundary contact conditions, where a low Mu value is beneficial. But unless both parts (bearing surface and journal surface) had the DLC, then the softer surface without the DLC would simply be slowly sheared away.
Interesting discussion.
Regards,
Terry