How long does it take a decent quality speaker to "wear out"?


After all, they do have moving parts and capacitors. . . .

(I suppose that "decent quality" s a relative term.  FTR, I am running a pair of the older B&W 805s, and for all I know, they may not actually meet the criteria of "decent quality.")

immatthewj

My Acoustic Research AR-9 from 1979 still sound great  all original parts 

Depends a lot on the usage and the environment. A lot of my gear that has always been in the house and under climate control has lasted 37+ years so far with only minor service, not due simply to age. A few caps in amps and some speaker drivers have been replaced, but very few issues. Some items that were kept in the garage did not fare as well. Foam coming apart, cabinets deteriorating, oxidation on the electronics internals, etc. I have friends that bought cheaper stuff and it was a total loss in a few years. Hard to say how long they last but buying good quality helps things last longer.

Matthew:

The old production 5ar4's were a good investment (get them while you can).

I purchased the remaining stock of the Benji Frank eyeglass frames I wear (90% off closeout) and they are now unobtainable @ any price.

Though they are durable frames I'm down to 9 out of 11 pairs (hard on glasses).

 

DeKay

@dekay  , I remember you mentioning that back when I was inquiring about 5AR4s.  I am hoping that I am not as hard on rectifier tubes as you are on glasses.  

I own a set of DQ 10's.  Bought them from an electrical engineer.  They are still 100% original as far as I can tell with the exception of a re-foam  He told me they were never driven hard.  His wife wasn't too fond of them.  They sound fabulous.  Crossover looks original with the yellow DQ caps....