Buy a $40,000 10 year old amp for $4,000 or new amp for same money?


Hi. There are bargains to be had on really high-end components that are more than a few years old. DACs change too much and we need the newer technology. How about amps and pre-amps? I know it can depend on the specific amp but in general is a 10 year old amp that was $40,000 in 2009 and now sell for $4,000 a better value than a new amp that sells for $4,000 in 2019?  How much has amplification evolved in the past decade or so? (I posted a similar questions about speakers in that forum). Thanks for all the input and wisdom. 
mcmanus
Hi,
@luxmancl38, my intention was not to check your maths but to state that not all amps depreciate that fast. AVR's do because most work in digital domain they are plentiful-they are a bad investment, excellent tube and ss are not.
Generally amps depreciate much slower than cars.

I found it humorous. I'm in retail and I have lots of customers that can't figure out 40% off. Actually I've made money on older amps. I had a Forte 4A amp I bought for $499 and sold it about 8 years later for $750. 
In the book of intelligent questions, I’m struggling to locate this one. If something retailed for $40,000 and the ask is now $4,000 then I wouldn’t worry too much and drink its former Koolaid. Cars and stereo gear seem to get alot of comparisons but while similar, they have different decline and appreciation curves. The summary though is good stuff holds it value, less than good stuff does not. 1979 Toyota Landcruiser vs 1979 Chevy Blazer. Ok but what about that same Landcruiser vs something modern? Hmmmm. 1988 Porsche Carrera vs 1988 Chevy Camaro. Ok but what about that same Porsche vs something modern? New stuff works better in most cases but resale tends to be won by classics rather than commodities. 

Good stuff finds a price floor rather quickly but cars and gear differ because of what my car collecting buddy calls static cling. He identifies cars that buyers may want to drive, relive their glory days or more importantly, the ability to enthrall on “static” display. Eye candy in other words, conversation topics, a prop for a lifestyle. Audio gear doesn’t typically fall into that category unless it has the “Goldberg factor” as in Rube. Does it look cool and is it something that pushes the envelope engineering and design wise. I haven’t seen everything by a longshot but if a bunch of people gather around to stare at an amp, I would be concerned for them but make no mistake, McIntosh meters are an attempt at this. There isn’t a $40,000 amp available for $4,000 unless it was broken and really bad to begin with. Please feel free to cut and paste this response on your other 20 threads asking the same question. Peace.
10 years old amp is not that old yet. Some (like Bryston) would still have another 10 years of manufacturer’s warranty left. Though they would unlikely be sold for 10% of original price.
If your premise is true, it's a no-brainer. Buy the used amp. Who knows, if you don't like it, maybe you can sell it for $20k. I've had great luck with used amps. My Adcom 555 is much older than 10 years, and still performs very well. Same for my PrimaLuna. Amp technology hasn't changed all that much over the years.