Is age bad for solid state amps?


Hi everybody,
I am interested in get an Audio Research 100.2 amplifier.
As I know, the production of these amps was from 1998 to 2003.
I wonder if transistors, capacitors and other electronic parts have some deterioration with age.
Thanks.
cinequadom
The above comments are generally correct, as is the comment that an amp made in 1998 is not old.

I would add, however, that age with solid-state amps is more of an issue than it is with tube amps. The output transistors in solid-state amps can go out of production, and if such an amp loses an output device, it can't be fixed and the amp is toast. This won't happen to a tube amp that uses output tubes common in the tens of thousands of tubed guitar amps that are sold each year, e.g., EL-34's, 6L6, 6V6, 6550, etc., or that use a classic triode like the 300B, i.e., this won't happen with most tube amps.

In addition, when a solid-state amp breaks, it usually has to be sent to a tech or to the manufacturer to be repaired. When a tube amp malfunctions, it's more often than not a tube that is the source of the problem, and they are user-replaceable.

Finally, with a tube amp, the tubes are the circuit, and when the amp is retubed, it's basically a brand-new new amp.
I remember I read an interview with Jeff Rowland somewhere. He promised that he would fix every amplifier he'd ever made, for as long as he was alive. Maybe ARC will too.
It is their problem to find proper transistors and other stuff not ours.
True, well-made and maintained tube amps can probably last for longer than hundred years, no one knows yet.
Electrolytic caps can last 50 years but every 10degC in temperature increase cuts life by half (it is simply drying out). It is gradual process that increases ESR (Effective Series Resistance) of capacitor up to a point where ESR is so high that capacitor is getting hot from the power losses. Thermal runaway is even possible since hot capacitor has even higher ESR that heats up capacitor further creating condition for explosion (capacitors have vent/fuse).

I would replace 10 year old cap only if it was exposed to temperature (next to tube, etc). Be careful with amplifier that was in storage for a long time (many years) since electrolyte eats up aluminium oxide that serves as isolation (lowering breakdown voltage). Voltage on capacitor builds up aluminum oxide layer again - increasing breakdown voltage but it has to be done slowly - over few days using variable transformer slowly increasing voltage in steps.
If you only get 10 years or so from a SS used component that cost a fraction of a new one, I say you win. If you can't get it fixed somewhere that is kinda sad, but I've owned some stuff that seems to go on forever. I still have an Adcom 535II that I use for a utility amp (secondary summer deck speakers) that sounds great and refuses to die.
Iv'e had decent Solid State amps for 38 years and the only issue I had was a blown fuse , do to my own duefesness . I leave them turned on all the l time .