In response to this, "burn in" and "being out of adjustment" are not the same.
If you know better convince Nelson Pass of this below, in case you missed it.
Nelson Pass:
"We burn products in for two reasons -
1. We want to see if anything fails.
2. We want to readjust the amplifier against any drift in performance that comes with a burn-in."
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Yes of course these are factors in any piece of gear, but where do most manufacturers draw the line? Nelson Pass is an exceptional designer of both consumer and professional gear, but this isn't explaining what burn in is?
He is also doing this because he knows that on occasion a small percentage of parts "drift" from their values quickly and are by their standard out of spec, not necessarily anyone elses spec.
I have built and repaired many pieces of gear and always take readings of the values of for example capacitors and resistors, they can be so close to spec for dozens or even hundreds in a row and then all of the sudden so far from spec. This is why all good manufacturers burn in their products and do a final analysis of specs.
They know from experience the parts failure, drift and burn in time rate that is expected.
Quoting Nelson Pass doesn't make your description any more accurate than you previously stated, that is his procedure for meticulous production standards which are seldomly done by any in the field because final costs of products get pretty high.
Nelson has set the bar pretty high for himself and can't be caught with his pants down so going to those lengths of "burn in" is beyond what is burn in. It really making sure his product has satisfied his standards to not get back a piece of gear for component failure within the warranty period or even much longer. This is so far above most others ethically alone that it is a personal over financial gain that few choose to go to.
Think about what "burn in" really is again in the real world in everyday use products.
DM