The main failure point of all old electronics are the capacitors. Over time, 
electrolytic capacitors dry out, and can cause a wide array of different 
faults. From ones that are leaky, and or way out of spec, they can exhibit all 
sorts of “fun” errors in hardware. 

The main one i’ve come across is “RIFA” brand rectangular thin-film filter 
capacitors. These can be quite violent when they fail, and they fail often. 
Many power supplies can be brought back (for a time) by just replacing these 
capacitors.

Electrolytics, whilst far more reliable (and less explosive) than the RIFA 
capacitors, also dry out and go bad over time. However, uness your machine was 
built during the “capacitor plague”, these can still be surprisingly reliable. 
However, if you’re planning on using the electronics regularly, they are still 
recommended to be replaced.The SMD electrolytics from the late 80’s and onwards 
 often need replacing,. These can leak and rot out the leads, and being surface 
mount, they can be quite tricky to replace.

Outside of electrolytics, tantalum capacitors can also fail. Whilst they don’t 
“dry out” as such, they still degrade over time. These can fail quite 
spectacularly, resulting in smoke and flames if you are not careful. They are 
generally more reliable, and probably not worth replacing across board, but 
when they do fail, it can be quite impressive.

Other electrical components, such as PCB’s, resistors, and silicon chips, have 
no discernable lifetime outside of corrosion and physical damage. Provided they 
are looked after, these components can carry on working indefinitely. 

Obviously, mechanical components (fans, relays, rotary switches), vacuum tubes, 
and much older cardboard tube components (resistors in vacuum tube TV’s/radios) 
stiff suffer from degredation from wear and old age. Often replacements can be 
as scarce as the equipment itself, so extra care should be taken when powering 
that sort of stuff on.


> On Jan 31, 2020, at 7:22 PM, P Gebhardt via cctalk <cctalk@classiccmp.org> 
> wrote:
> 
> Yep, that's what I call preventive electronics maintenance: I power up for a 
> little time at least once a year all electronics that were in operational 
> order up to a year ago, no matter what it is, to make sure they don't turn 
> defective from "non-running", which is mainly affected by caps indeed. 
> Best regards,
> Pierre

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