The tubes fail because people turn their units on and off, this being hard on the tubes. I've owned a Sigma II for almost fourteen years and ran it 24/7 until it went into a second system in a little-used second apartment six years ago. It just went back into my system last week to decode signal from a Wadia IPod dock - it sounded as good as ever - I had never changed the original tube - but I had some extra tubes laying around and an hour to kill, so I finally retubed it, if only for the hell of it.
Most people do not understand what gear should be left on 24/7 and what gear needs to be turned off when not in use. Generally speaking, turn off tube amps, Class-A biased solid-state amps, and maybe tube preamps with tube power supplies (depends on preamp). Leave everything else on 24/7, including any tube gear that uses small-signal tubes, like tube preamps with solid-state power supplies (that's 97% of them), tube DAC's and tubed CD players, and tubed tuners. If you insist upon turning off digital gear, sell your system and buy yourself a double-wide.
Most people do not understand what gear should be left on 24/7 and what gear needs to be turned off when not in use. Generally speaking, turn off tube amps, Class-A biased solid-state amps, and maybe tube preamps with tube power supplies (depends on preamp). Leave everything else on 24/7, including any tube gear that uses small-signal tubes, like tube preamps with solid-state power supplies (that's 97% of them), tube DAC's and tubed CD players, and tubed tuners. If you insist upon turning off digital gear, sell your system and buy yourself a double-wide.