For me, main aspects are:
- function: what can be measured, ranges, accuracy, some special features, eg. hw trigger possibilies of scopes.
- interface: usablility, speed, easy access to main functions,
- quality: low failure rate, construction, parts with plenty of headroom and fitting the purpose.
- maintanance: service docs with schematics, service friendly buildup. Simpler circuits are easier to understand.
- resource: energy consumption, occupied size.
Then there are emotional aspects:
- fun in use / repair
- good TEA community (eg share tips, repair stories, free manuals)
- Brand with good reputation
for me, if an instrument gets obsolete, has to do with multiple aspects. And: A lot of instruments are mediocre even new. This are the ones which go obsolete very quick.
Interesting examples:
- heathkit, their function and quality is often sub-earth level. But maintanance and emotional aspects compensate for that.
- fluke 289: superb function, a bit clumsy, bad interface, no service manuals
- hp: they had designers who were responsible for good user interfaces and maintainability.
With the advent of one knob menue driven interfaces some machines got nearly unusable.
- tektronix: analog scopes with good function, interface and maintenance. With the digital tds 744a or the like: superb function, but bad interface, like fluke 289
- hp 4274a: full service manual, no customer parts, good user interface, but internal very complex, hard to maintain.
- genrad 1689 compared to 4274a (very near to each other in function and age): better accuracy, worser user interface, simpler buildup, easier maintainance
newer developments sometimes are not so good in these aspects, eg:
- main functions hidden in 2nd or 3rd menue level
- noisy because auf smps (which tends to fail early)
- complex and overloaded banana software (ripes and rottens at the customer)
- operating systems need minutes to boot, are slow and tend to security problems.
- custom IC's, controllers with integrated flash not only protect the knowledge, but are unobtanium at all or short after maketing ends.
- very quick out of service, no service manuals
- developed by unexprienced new staff, who ignore existing knowledge (Danning Kruger effect), eg. hameg hm8142 is good, hm8143 has design flaws (do not connect both outputs antiparallel, one of them will be killed in a blink
), hm8142 has very good user interface only with the optional keyboard, which is removed at hm8143.
For commercial use, you may have a service contract with the manufacturer, that's it, the manufacturer drains your employers money.
But afterwards these machines get very quick obsolete, as they can't be repaired anymore or it is too expensive or excessive "customer rights" or business quarter shareholder value driven managers push manufacturers out of buisiness with private persons (eg. keysight).
Therefore, as private person, i like machines which fulfil many of the aspects mentioned above. Age is only indirect a concern, and has 2 aspects:
- developent over time improves or worsens different aspects in newer machines. Norms (eg. electric safety) develop, too.
- Lifetime: things get dirty (fixable) and wore out or fail (often fixable). Availability gets a concern if needed on the job. Jojo's are not good for 24/7 use.