Let $\mathcal C$ be an accessible category. For $C \in \mathcal C$, define the presentability rank $rk(C)$ of $C$ to be the minimal regular $\kappa$ such that $C$ is $\kappa$-presentable. Following Lieberman, Rosicky, and Vasey, say that $C$ is filtrable if it is the colimit of a chain $C = \varinjlim_{\alpha < \lambda} C_\alpha$ of objects $C_\alpha$ of lower presentability rank $rk(C_\alpha) < rk(C)$, and almost filtrable if it is a retract of the colimit $D$ of such a chain such that $rk(D) = rk(C)$.
Question: Let $\mathcal C$ be an accessible category. Under what conditions can we say that every object $C \in \mathcal C$ of sufficiently large presentability rank is almost filtrable? Does it suffice to assume that $\mathcal C$ is locally presentable?
(Of course, if "chain" is replaced with "highly-filtered colimit", then no conditions are necessary.)
In the above-linked preprint are given various conditions for filtrability dependent on $rk(C)$, but they are not really focused on the locally presentable case. In this case,
$rk(C)$ is always a successor (unless it's $\aleph_0$ or perhaps if it's smaller than the accessibility rank of $\mathcal C$);
there's a basic argument which shows that if $rk(C)$ is the successor of a regular cardinal, then $C$ is almost filtrable (and the last Remark in the above-linked paper asserts that the retract can be removed with the fat small object argument).
But I'm not sure how to say anything when $rk(C)$ is the successor of a singular cardinal.
Motivation:
It's important to me to be able to handle all $C \in \mathcal C$ of sufficiently large presentability rank, because this opens up the possibility of a new sort of inductive argument in the theory of locally presentable categories: induction on presentability rank using decomposition by chains. This sort of induction should be particularly well-suited to applications related to the small object argument, which interacts well with chains but not with general highy-filtered colimits.