Did you actually read what I wrote? That devices still work after a decade passed since capacitor replacement.
Replaced with what? Guessing you chose something rather more robust (and expensive, were it used in original design). Cap spec is part of the design!
Ed:
This is about crappy caps, not ratings. Good quality capacitors with similar ratings (ripple current, lifetime) placed instead of crappy capxons which failed after 2 years are working a decade later without an issue.
Highlighted keywords -- if this is the case, clearly one of them is rated incorrectly (or, perhaps rated as worst-case rather than average-case lifetime?). I haven't seen the stats from each manufacturer, if this is the case (there is unfortunately very little that manufacturers make public about their inner process and quality..). There's also weasel words, like reading your example overly strictly: i.e., just matching ripple current and lifetime, not also
impedance and
temperature. In which case, it's likely not even your fault, as it's hit-and-miss whether they give impedance spec at all. :/
So, I'm probably just being a dick, or it's manufacturers not giving out enough information to adequately specify their parts.
Tim