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Hard drives all have MTBF ratings.
it depends on the 'state of solid state'..........if it's of Class A topology only a fool would leave it on 24/7Myself I turn my gear off, unplug it when gone or storms threatening.SS warm up is way over exaggerated
The lifetime of the capacitors goes way up when they are operated at or near room temperature.
Unfortunately there is no amplifier of any class whose internal chassis temperature is at or near room temperature.
Also, I have seen amplifiers where additional external power supply capacitors were chassis mounted a tiny fraction of an inch from hot internal heat sinks. So it also depends on the physical chassis design and location of the capacitors.
In addition, I may buy a new amp, which runs 100 watts cooler at idle. Same amp as I now own, just the latest model. (they turned down the class A idle percentage.)
Always on does place your components at risk from electrical line transients and also from another cause.If you turn your equipment on only when you use it, then you will likely recognize and do something if a small fault condition occurs (and a fault will eventually occur as all electronic parts have a finite service life).If the equipment has a minor part failure while being always on, the chances are you won't recognize it promptly and a small fault, cooking away, will eventually turn into a big, expensive, and smelly fault.We have seen this happen when an old amplifier came in for repair with black anodized heat sinks turned light purple color and output devices and their sockets both charred black. This was a long term excess heat issue, not a fault large enough to blow a speaker or B+ fuse, just enough to cook the amp to death long term.We see no reason that properly designed equipment should take more than 10 minutes to play just fine as by then the capacitors should all be fully charged, the supply voltage up to 100 percent, the regulators regulating properly, the bias current up to normal, the vacuum tubes (if any) fully warmed up and everything at thermal equilibrium. Maybe those $50 good sounding magic fuses need more warm up time, but, oh well.Save electricity, use the design service life of all your electronic parts wisely, and fight global warming.Frank