Believe it or not I came face-to-face with someone here on the blog who questioned how we came to do mass capacitor replacements and considered it "uneducated" troubleshooting.
Even sighting examples such as vacuum tube equipment with wax caps and dry electrolytics, 1970 - 1980's vintage beaded tants, etc did not convince him otherwise.
I think of it more like planned replacement of lightbulbs in a factory or office. You know that at some point a light is going to fail. You know something about their design life and failure rates. If you have to get a maintenance worker out for every failure you're going to spend a lot of man/woman/thing
* power on it. So instead you follow one of two strategies, you either (1) wait for a single failure and replace all the lamps on that corridor/whatever at once, or (2) replace all the lamps on a corridor/whatever on a planned replacement schedule before any of them fail.
In the case of failed lightbulbs it's merely inconvenient when one blows, or at worst involves a minor increase in risk for safety related purposes. When an electrolytic cap fails badly it can seriously damage other components or boards and, non-trivially, isn't as easy to diagnose as a blown light bulb. The increased costs of failure would therefore argue strongly for following the same strategies as used for light bulb replacement/maintenance, i.e. When the first cap starts to fail replace all similar caps, or replace all caps on a planned schedule before they fail.
Where the "
planned replacement before failure for caps" falls down is that we often don't have adequate data to guide us on what would be a sensible replacement schedule. It would be nice if the service manuals had design life data included with the BOMs but in an age where a decent schematic in a service manual is a true rarity I might as well ask for the moon on a stick and a pony as well.
* The 'thing' in question is that shambling heap in overalls we've all seen in one factory or another where you wouldn't even want to hazard a guess at the
species involved, let alone gender.