I'm on the board of directors of my local ham radio club. Ham radio is a hobby for all ages, but it definitely skews toward the older folks, who learned on old gear and sometimes still enjoy using it. When older members pass away, widows often donate gear to the club, and we get to figure out what to do with it. We have a few tube testers (these used to be found in the back of any retail store that sold tubes). We have many analog multimeters. The high-end Simpsons are still useful and sell for a pretty penny; the $7.00 Radio Shack meter from 1978 might still work as well as it did when new, but it's hard to find anyone who wants to use it, since the cheapest digital meter is better in almost every way.
Really old gear, made with vacuum tubes and point-to-point wiring, can almost always be repaired to like-new functional condition. The circuits are usually relatively simple, and wiring can be probed relatively easily. Tubes and inductors rarely fail. Resistors and capacitors can be replaced with modern substitutes that often work better than the originals. Schematics are surprisingly likely to be available online (if not in an envelope inside the equipment itself). Old hardware like switches can sometimes be a bit of a problem, but usually not insoluble.
But gear from the early age of integrated circuits is a lot more difficult to repair. And when software and firmware enter the picture, good luck!
We've got quite a few CRT oscilloscopes. Early scopes that lack triggering circuitry are like that cheap Radio Shack meter -- even if repaired to work as well as they did when new, nobody wants to use them. They're relegated to being historical curiosities only.
Tektronix scopes from the dawn of the integrated circuit age have custom chips in them, with no readily available replacement sources except other old Tektronix scopes. Too often, the same chips have failed in several scopes, so cannibalizing is not always practical. In any case, the older CRT scopes are big, heavy, and contain lethal voltages inside, so not every tinkerer would be well-advised to tear one open and fix it. Most problems with a scope require at least a separate working scope to diagnose and repair.
Older analog oscilloscopes have one advantage over all but the very nicest and most expensive digital scopes: They work well in X-Y mode. Specifically, they continuously paint the X versus Y trace, with no interruptions for moving digital data around, no pauses to repaint the screen, no frame rate issues whatsoever. There are a few cases where that can be very useful. It can never quite be matched with a digital scope, but a few high-end units can sometimes come close enough for some practical purposes.