In my experience servicing many old Fender amps I have not run into any fibreboard that has had a conductive problem.
We have seen it
many times here. It was already known back in the 90's when the vintage amp thing happened it was a well known and documented thing. I've been here for ~15 years, have read almost every post since then, I read all of Kevin O'Connor's web forum when it was around, many tube books. They all confirm the same thing, that many/most of those Fender boards go wonkey sooner or latter.
My BF SR, I had taken the boards screws out, was playing through the amp, and with a plastic screw driver I would push down on the board to get it to make solid contact with the chassis. The sound got way thinner, less fullness, with a little less volume. But I was used to my amp sounding like that. I had very little tube amp experience then, so I left it. Now I'd change that board out in a heart beat.
So it can be, often is, effecting the amps sound, but the amp still seems to be working fine.
I think that happens to
lots of Fender amps, but you don't hear it because it happens slowly. But it's there. With a fiberglass boards that won't happen.
I have run into several thinner fiberglass/epoxy boards that were conductive. Vox and Marshall, granted they were MIC.
I've only heard of this 1 time. Silvergun had a new black fiberglass board that was conductive.
They do make conductive fiberglass boards, not sure why, but they do make them.
have read that there were some CBS boards that became conductive and one theory was it was because of the wax like coating the put on them.
Well, the boards before they waxed them were having problems with moisture and becoming conductive.
The theory was that it was proof the Fender was aware that the boards went conductive over time and that's why later boards were dipped in wax to stop them from absorbing moisture and going conductive. Fender would not take the time and spend the money to do that if they didn't need to fix a problem.
Of course the fiberboard could be more suseptive to moisture intrusion but who knows for sure.
See above.
We do know for sure, we have empirical evidence, from many examples, that some/many of those boards do/did absorb moisture.
Ive had amps here that were underwater for a time and the boards were just fine.
Sometimes the board can be dried out and will work fine, sometimes goes wonky again. Some guys take out the board and bake it in an oven or small toaster oven at a very low temp to dry it out. Sometimes it works, sometimes, like above, it just gets bad over time again, few months to a year or so.
Are there any scientific studies that have been made on the durability of vulcanized fiberboard, because there are many other places where they are used as insulators not just guitar amps?
I have no idea, but like I said above we have a lot of case study examples, empirical evidence, that proves without doubt that it has and still does happen.
IMHO the newly manfactured vulcanized fiberboard is going to remain serviceable for a good long time, decades. However it comes to mind you might be talking about some other problem with fiberboard eyelet boards.
I'm not talking about some other problem.
Do what ever you want, but we've seen way too many examples that many vulcanized fiberboards most likely will develop problems.
Yes it takes time, but if I have a reasonably priced option, I'm gonna use it. I wont touch it, if I don't have to.