I said up to 20 yrs..... that covers a shit load of models, B&W and color LCD.
Just to remind you what you wrote:
Many up to 20 yrs old LCD scopes from the likes of Lecroy, Tek, Agilent etc should meet your requirements
Which is nonsense, really, not only because usable LCD screens have been in scopes for a lot less years, but also because it's silly to buy kit that old for professional use, as such old gear is usually closer to the end of its functional life (and often already way beyond its useful life). Anything that is out of support is generally a very bad idea for professional use, which means depending on the support policy of the manufacturer that the scope should not be older than say 5 to 8 years.
Any modern scope that doesn't use less than 100W is a power hog.
100W may seem a lot for you, but it really isn't. Of course if you only look at low end stuff like Rigol or Siglent scopes then 100W sounds like a lot, but even if you look at mid-range scopes with fast processing and sample rates 10x as much as your low end lunch boxes then often the acquisition system alone can easily consume 100W or more. A modern high-end scope can easily exceed 600W.
Is it a lot of power? Yes. Does it make it a power hog? Not really.
Who needs an extra thig like a HD to worry about.....
Most of the better scopes run Windows (not just some cut down Embedded variant like Win CE), so some mass storage is needed. A new hard drive is roughly $50. If that amount causes you headache then you've got your priorities seriously wrong.
any body know of a scope that is fitted with a SSD as standard?
Some current Windows scopes now come with SSDs instead of hard drives. But many still come with hard drives.
That might be more acceptable, power usage, reliability and boot times.
Not really. SSDs have around the same power consumption as 2.5" SATA hard drives (laptop drives), some SSDs even exceed that. Reliability isn't necessarily better with SSDs, as various examples have shown, and hard disks can easily serve for mony years (especially when they're running more constantly and don't have to suffer from lots of on-off cycles). In addition, you need a OS with TRIM support to maintain an SSD's performance, which only became available with Windows 7. Older scopes however run WindowsXP (or even Windows 2000) and for those OSes the standard hard drive is still the better choice. Especially in an application like a scope where drive performance is close to irrelevant.
And as I said before, boot time may be an issue for hobbyists, but for a professional who powers the instrument up at the morning and down at night (or even leaves it running 24hrs?day) boot time is simply irrelevant. Especially when boot time also includes checking the hardware which on an advanced scope can easily take much more time than on some el-cheapo low end box.