</font><font color="blue" class="small">( </font><font color="blueclass=small">( Chips/transistors don't wear out )</font>
Respectfully.. I'd have to disagree with you.
Power cycles .. off/onn states and inrush are the detrimental times for an electronic device like a multi-transistored chip.
I don't worry too much about the basic discreet components.. like single packaged parts.. but IC's are iffy about heat and power cycles in the extremes and long term.. etc....
Soundguy )</font>
Well, Chris, it pretty much depends on how good they want to make them. A lot's been learned in the last 30 years on how to make electronics survive in harsh conditions. As the scale of how much can be done on a chip has doubled again and again; so has the scale of what CAN be done on a chip. Chips now come with their own integrated protection circuitry. No longer do the chip manufacturers leave their product to the mercy of an unknown board designer. Beyond that there's Mil-spec components that are hardened against most anything and the age-old practice of over-engineering. Sure you've got off/on cycles, inrush and temperature extremes. But nowadays any or all of these can be covered with a few well spent dollars.
Add this to the fact that the electronic requirements of a CUT are quite basic compared to the average laptop and it's clear that, for not much money, it's possible to make CUT electronics survive normal usage indefinitely. Whether that's been done or not has to be determined. That's why it's got to be trouble-free for the first 10 years before I'd say the electronics themselves just aren't going to be an issue.
But the wiring harness is the Achilles heel of even the best tractor electronics. Susceptibility to rodent damage and vulnerability to fire damage remain. The connectors have gotten alot better and the insulation is incredibly tough; but not so tough as to resist flame or a starving rodent.
Actually, like you, I like the simple stuff; tractors I can diagnose and fix with my own two hands. The
L4300 I bought recently is a case in point. It's as basic as my old Ford 4000.
Still you can't deny progress. It does raise a point, however, that if you do buy a high-tech CUT with lots of electronics; you should by it from a company with a record of success in applying the latest technology. That would limit me to products from the Big Three. Something built around a Z80 derivative with mid '80s circuit design might not go the distance even though it might work well enough for awhile.
FWIW
Bob