In practice, most optical transceiver modules provide 3–7 years of reliable service, depending on conditions. With proper cooling, clean connections, and gentle handling, SFP+, QSFP+, QSFP28, QSFP-DD, and OSFP modules can deliver their full expected lifetime. Their lifespan depends on a mix of design, environment, and how they're used in real-world conditions. In well-cooled data centers, common modules such as SFP+ or QSFP28 often run reliably for 5–7 years. In harsher environments—like hot telecom rooms or outdoor enclosures—network operators often. As a practical baseline, short-reach modules in clean, cooled data centers usually give you five to seven years of solid service; the most conservative shops plan for three to five years for edge racks, wiring closets, and any place where temperature and handling are outside ideal ranges. These are. And Why TenFour Optics Are Built to Outlive the Network They're Plugged Into In many environments, optics get replaced every 2–3 years—not because they fail, but because that's what the OEM lifecycle tells you to do. Process: Devices are subjected to prolonged operation. What is the average lifespan of an AVR? I have a Denon 3312 AVR and a Marantz 6011 AVR. I hardly use them, with an average use of 5 hours per month. Is this just how the quality of AVR is? I'm wondering if brands like Yamaha will live. SFP, in the wild, have a "life" between 1 hour to 10 years.