SeanB,
I have been got, I think any one around long enough has.
like,
The high temp test where you test a circuit and forget that it was built for a bench test and used lead solder instead of the hard to solder silver solder and falls apart during the test. Created a lot of plastic globs that still worked when we needed a quick part test and did not have the correct package. But It's Hard to find the line that gives good answers the "Will this work at 250C" line in a data sheet.
or
The backup battery for a cesium beam clock that a bunch of us thought the yearly flying clock maintenance team changed and tested, This was the master, standard procedure was to un coil an extension cord hanging there just for that purpose and get it power, and of course it was important so it;s normal power came from a no break power source. That day everything died for a bit That old tube in the clock really does not want to get back up to temp and operating with out frying it's self first. Then after hours of constant baby sitting, getting it going, I needed to get it back having a 1 second pulse when it should. That clock was known the be right on, It was un-real the number of calls we were getting. It was a monitor reference for Loran C med. Just to make things more fun the monitor receiver needed a really great 1 second pulse just to let you try to get in sync with Loran C once every 17+ minutes. The next day got a message " never heard of any one getting a tube that old started". After A special flying clock visit, and I missed the second mark by 3.2 micro seconds. Not as much money as your's for the fix, but shouting and screaming was very loud and far ranging. Just for those wondering, A new tube was $25,000 an worked better with a little age.
C