I have been following this thread with great interest. I recall a few years back when I posted my personal experience with Tyvek specifically, not other WRB's. As a remodeler, I will just state again that I would never put Tyvek on ANYTHING again. DuPont hit a home run with this product with respect to being able to cover large sections of sheathing in a big hurry, and it's ability to resist wind tear off. Its great for the contractor, and BAD for the house. The vapor permeability is it's downfall. Someone at DuPont decided that vapor originates inside a building and nowhere else. The truth about Tyvek is that it lets water vapor through and that vapor is absorbed by the sheathing and the sheathing ROTS, and ROTS and ROTs. I've replaced untold amounts of plywood and OSB sheathing because of Tyvek. I have seen it over and over again, the Tyvek looks fine, the sheathing under it is literally destroyed and the insulation and wallboard are perfectly intact. That moisture ain't coming from the inside of the building!
Conversely, I have opened up countless buildings over the last 40 years that were properly protected with felt. The condition of the building under the felt is often perfect with the exception of areas where the felt has been physically damaged or some other sort of flashing failure that routes water behind the felt.
It's perfectly understandable to see a product introduced by a large corporation, with a history of useful high quality products, and assume that the manufacturer has done his homework. In the case of Tyvek, nothing could be further from the truth.