Just something else you might want to consider, there is a tendency in these internal combustion engine thingies for them to effectively 'become used to' whatever oil they've been using for a reasonable amount of time, such that if you do change the oil you run in one, you might find that there's a number of oil related issues that suddenly crop up fairly soon after said change in oil brand/spec, often expensive issues at that!!
I suspect it's got something to do with the differences in the additive package, as the base oil itself is probably pretty similar. But once you've been running an engine on one brand/type/spec oil for a while, the additive package unique to that oil has likely done all the cleaning out of whatever sludge &/or build up that it's capable of dissolving, leaving behind anything it's not capable of removing (possibly helping the now partially worn rings maintain compression, or something similar elsewhere); and it's probably also coated any bearings &/or cylinder walls etc with whatever protective material it uses as well as it can too! Then if you suddenly change to an oil that might be basically similar but may have a significantly different additive package, that new oil could just clean out a whole lot of different stuff, or maybe leave some contaminants behind that your previous oil removed; and while the new oil's protective material may be compatible with what was in the previous oil, there's also a chance that it reacts &/or combines badly with that; all of which can mean the piston rings suddenly don't work quite as well as they used to, or the cylinder walls have a lighter/heavier coating of whatever protective film is on them, or the combustion contaminants don't get dissolved & carried away/filtered out to quite the same degree; any if which might suddenly leaving you with a seriously unhappy engine, simply because you changed the oil brand/type/spec?!?
So if you've been running T6 for a while, you say about 23,000 miles, largely without any concerns, and there's no real certainty that it actually
was the
OIL that caused your clutch issues, maybe you might want to think carefully and consider whether it's a good idea to 'suddenly' change to a different oil...

If you still feel the need to change your oil brand/type/spec regardless, it still might be worth making it a gradual change rather than a full on 'sudden' change at the next oil change - have you considered running a blend of the oils for a while, making it a gradual change - over; saaay, four oil change intervals?? You could run a 75/25 % old/new oil blend for the first oil change; 50/50 for the next; 25/75 for the third; and only making it a full 100% new oil brand/type/spec oil on the fourth oil change. Doing this
could be a smart move... or maybe not!

But you'll likely only know it would've been smart if you
DON'T do the gradual/blended change, and your engine &/or trans gives up/spits the dummy as a result! Too late then tho, isn't it?!
Just Sayin' that it's food for thought...