Older amplifers should be refurbished, of course. The first thing that has to be replaced would be the power supply caps, as these do degrade and can fail wtih nasty consequences. As I said earlier, with luck you can fit larger modern ones as they tend to be more compact for the same value. If the amplifier has been designed competently a slow ageing of the other components should not degrade sound, or not much.
I am currently using two refurbished Quad amplifiers (a 606-2 in the main system and a 405-2 in my study). The service engineer simply replaced all resistors and capacitors, arguing that these days quality components cost very little and labour is expensive. Why test a resistor if a new one costs peanuts?
I am currently using two refurbished Quad amplifiers (a 606-2 in the main system and a 405-2 in my study). The service engineer simply replaced all resistors and capacitors, arguing that these days quality components cost very little and labour is expensive. Why test a resistor if a new one costs peanuts?