I stopped ordering from
Digikey because I have received MANY very out of date
parts in the last few years out of not that many orders.
The only time in my life I ever bought "new" rheostats
from a good brand (Panasonic) showed up DOA from Digikey.
Once upon a time I actually used to prefer them to Mouser.
Now I just simply won't order from them unless they have something I can't get elsewhere.
But nowadays if Mouser doesn't have what I need, I'll probably be trying Jameco and TME before Digikey.
if it ain't broke...
if kept cool, electrolytics last for decades. Unless it's a piece of kit with known cap issues, I can see no benefit to recapping.
I recapped my trusty decades-old K2000, although my impression is that other models in the 2000 series are more susceptible to cap leakage.
IMHO the benefit is (a low cost) peace of mind that the instrument is safe guarded for the next couple of decades.
A leak may not be noticed until the pcb is badly damaged.
"if kept cool, electrolytics last...." Yeah well tell that to all the folks who brought me a DVD player, Game Console or Set Top Box which cooked itself to death in an enclosed TV stand with no ventilation and the customer refuses to replace said TV stand? Or keep a fully loaded rack powered on 24/7 with no spacing between the rack units to let them air out. Yes I agree that if kept cool (and the caps used are properly selected for their application) they last. I emphasize this part of the quote.
As someone who has replaced more failing or aging capacitors than could count, I have seen it all with capacitors...
-ones that pissed out and electrolytic corrosion ate the PCB, (PCB looks fine from top, but flip over and its all burned and black gunk)
-ones that looked like the top was about to burst, yet still worked to some degree (always fun to see people bring in something like "i keep cycling power until it works"
-ones where the top DID burst and leave scorch marks against the chassis
-ones that looked fine until removed and were found to be bulging on bottom and testing bad
-ones that test fine in terms of capacity out of circuit, but under load capacitance tanks (testing at multiple frequencies is very helpful here)
-ones that seem in spec "enough" but for whatever reason are too unstable on the power rail for sensitive electronics to work correctly (AC ripple for instance)
-ones that looked fine but don't even measure as a capacitor; LCR meter thinks its a resistor(!!!) - this was from a 35 year old switch mode supply
If you only repair your own things, not broken things other people bring you, I would also be more skeptical of recapping when it is not known to be the needed solution.
Something important to consider is diagnosing whether the capacitor is the cause of the failure or whether it failed due to another part of the circuit going bad.Another thing to consider is many times people will allow something to start "acting funny" then wait for it to fail to repair it. I think the repair and diagnosis should have began when it was acting funny and not fully failed. After all if you put in the same effort to test the individual components out of circuit then you will find the problem component anyway before it totally failed.
On my own possessions, I will do preventative full recap of the crucial components, usually on the power section. I am frequently repairing items which the capacitors are clearly already failed and often times they are no name caps or not from reputable brands. I have seen and been brought too many things where preventative maintenance would have actually prevented the failure. Now at this point I simply don't wait for them to die first.