About 10 years ago or so I worked in a couple of music stores around where I live. I had done a lot of reading and had fixed some amps even built a few clones.
So I went and got myself hired and I thought this is great. I told both owners I don't realy know any thing about SS amps. They both said "fine".
Next thing I know they got SS amps, and even keyboards (I did fix a Yamie once, had some bad keys) on the bench waiting for me when I came in.

So, ok I'll open it up and see what I can do.

After about a year I had worked on between the 2 stores no more than a dozen "old" and "old" style, no PCB tube amps. Nothing fancy, cap jobs, new tubes and bias, simple enough stuff. Amp owners where happy, nothing came back, boss'es were happy, me not so happy

Easely 95% of what I found laying on the bench when I would come in a couple of times a week were those little SS beginners amps. 90% of thoses amps had cold solder joints from the wave solder bath on the PCB's. The other 10% needed new input jacks, newer Fender being the most common culpret, at least that's what I experanced.
It took more time to take the amp apart and put it back together than to fix it, oh boy those were good times.
Don't get me wrong, I'm not trying to knock any one who works on SS amps, it's an honest living and somebodys got to fix them. It's up to you if your gonna work on SS amps, I just found for me it was not what I wanted to do, altho I'm glad I did it for a while.
Brad