Buying used: how old is too old?


All,

Considering buying some used speakers from a well established company, e.g., Wilson, Focal, B&W, etc.

Aside from obvious technology updates, do speakers have a shelf life? If so is this measured in overall life, or number of hours played?

I’ve read some reviews that some speakers can really improve with age, no doubt longevity is going to be influenced by speaker drivers. Perhaps paper breaks down before other materials—I don’t know.

Old flagships can be bought for a fraction of their original cost and less than new mid-level speakers. No break in needed! But maybe they would be broken down?

I’m sure there have been numerous threads on this topic, but I didn’t find much in my search and am also interested in any recent experience on the topic.

Would be really interested to hear thoughts, opinions, and experience with this.

Thanks!
w123ale

Showing 1 response by audioman58

Capacitors are the biggest thing when a speaker is over 10 years old the capacitors  dry out and you can replace with far superior xover parts I have been doing for 20 years now .even $$ speakers skimp unless spending big bucks , even then I had the latest ML 
ststs and Xover parts average at best even in the $80k flagship
using cheaper white Mundorf capacitors fo4 $80k they should have at least Mundorfs best supreme gold silver .
not my cup of tea but VH audio Odam caps are top shelf, 
Duelund great but Waay over priced , jupiter, Millflex very good 
best resistor sonicly is Path audio from Poland. If buying used 
for sure strongly consider upgrading your Xover parts it’s the 🧠 
or ❤️ of your speaker 🔈 everything goes through it .keep all original values just  much better quality ,inductors maybe depending on quality.