I am not a fan of oil analysis. For the same price of repeated oil analysis you can simply change your oil more frequently and have the engine last forever.
Many of the guys using the the Royal Purple, etc. rip off type lubricants want to be able to brag that they can go 10k 15k 20k miles without changing oil and they use analysis to one-up each other.
Shucks, I've got an aunt with a 1964 Valiant that has 47,000 miles on it and never has changed the oil - eat that you high mileage braggarts! :mrgreen:
We used oil analysis at the factory on our hydraulic fluid and transmission oil on large machines and there it is useful. An oil change is thousands of dollars and being able to go longer between changes is simple economics.
Good information can be found at:
http://www.bobistheoilguy.com/
You probably know the website, but just in case I threw it in.
OK, now to your question - and brazenly stolen from Bob:
Copper is widely used due to its high ductility and thermal conductivity. It is mainly utilized in bushings and bearings such as: crankshaft journal bearings, connecting rod bearings, camshaft bushings, piston wrist pin bushings, thrust washers, and even heat exchangers (oil coolers).
From what you say and from experience back at the factory I tend to think that the copper level you are seeing is normal for your engine. What you will watch for is an upward trend in the copper level which would indicate increasing wear of some component.
And this is what oil analysis is really useful for - as opposed to absolute levels of this or that metal.