In the 1980's I worked as a field engineer that supported a lot of pdp-11's. They were very reliable for the time; tape drives and disks were the #1 maintenance items. To actually have to open up the processor and change a board was not a regular activity.
Other machines of that era, like those from Gould or Perkin/Elmer or DG gave regular practice in the art of repairing processors.
Guess I expect them to work forever. Like a Toyota.
https://retrocmp.com/articles/trying-to-fix-a-dec-pdp-1134-b...
The feeling of accomplishment when the machine boots after a major repair (almost) makes it all worth while.
(i think i would have found a used backplane...fixing it was crazy clever)