If something is going to change its characteristics through this kind of "break in" procedure then it isn't suitable as any kind of long term use. The idea behind designing a voltage reference is that it is reproducible, reliable, and predictable. If the material changes properties durng use, then it is not very desirable.
People who think that voltage references or oscillators need a break in are fooling themselves. They need to ask themselves this question: If the components change so much during break in, how do they magically stop changing after this alleged break in period?
Another: If they change properties so drastically during break in, how long until they change beyond being "good" again or utterly fail from the same change in characteristics?
This isnt specifically directed at Lightages, ive seen plenty of good content from him, just in general, they are a good example though. Or even at this specific topic.
Lets see how some of these statements fare if we change it to something we know a bit more about
Its a mechanical thing, mechanical things do break in a bit after manufacture. If a knob on a power supply is really stiff when its bran new, what would you do? twist it back and forth a few times and see if it smooths out? And what if after a few rotations it loosens up and is fine. Will you worry about how long till it gets sloppy?
Is a 100-500 mile break in on an engine complete bs by the manufacturers when you'd expect (at least the long block) to last 150k-250k miles?
Yes, we get it, audiophile stuff is funny, and a very large portion of the high end stuff is utter BS. Will a woofer or tweeter brand new from the factory be different in response after you run it at near full power with broadband noise for 100 hours? I'd suspect so. Will a headphone where the diaphragm is just a thin little mylar sheet change? I'd be more dubious about that.
Everyone is so quick to see anything remotely audiophile, and then they like to jump all over it, post a bunch of crap just so they can show how much smarter than the dumb audiophiles they are. Without even considering there may be a
small sliver of merit where the audiophile junk came from.
Like seriously, I've always considered making a nice DAC + headphone amp as a project of my own, but I wouldnt even post it on this forum, let alone ask advice about design, because the anti-audiophool nutters would be the majority of the posters in the thread.