I also just purchased a 465m off eBay. $80 shipped. (Perhaps it was the same seller? I got it from some guy in Canada).
I have a teardown of it somewhere in the product reviews section. Though it is a very old piece of equipment, I don't necessarily see any sudden death in the near future. There's really only a few things that could go wrong with these scopes.
Here's my list. Almost all of these problems are fixable-
1.) Power supply- Electrolytic caps gone kaput
2.) CRT burns out
3.) Switches, potentiometers wear out
4.) ICs die
Replacing caps is easy shmeezy, Can't fix the CRT, but there are lots of people selling old ones, and even some new old stock. Some of switches are proprietary 'Tek specialties', but with some isopropyl alcohol and a little bit of creativity, you can get any dirty switch back up and..switching. Potentiometers are almost always standard types. Sometimes they are on funny standoffs from the board, and you might have to fit a extender rod onto it, but it's do-able. And you might think "OMG an IC burn out, I'm screwed!" But alas, Tek sockets just about every DIP IC, and even some transistors if they feel like it. Plus the parts themselves are typically standard logic type parts. There are some Tek chips but typically you can find replacements. Only thing you really don't want to mess around is the HV section unless you really know what you are doing.
My scope works well; The only complaint I have is that some of the pots and switches are a little sticky or gritty. So I might try replacing some of the more prominent pots and maybe a switch or two.
Remember, these scopes are not like the stuff you see today. They were built like tanks.You can take almost any MTTF and throw it out the window, in my opinion. I'm not saying that these things won't fail, because everything will fail at one point or another, but it is highly unlikely that anything catastrophic happens, and even if it did, you could probably fix it.