If you pick the right mov power rating it life is very long.
If you pick to low a rating it's as above
If you pick to low a rating it's as above
less reliable they become
less reliable they become
My experience is that when there is a serious transient the MOV goes into a permanent strong conduction mode, and the local TV repair shop had no clues about replacements for them. They would simply clip the failed MOV out and replace the fuse, and next time something else would fail, and they would scrap the set. That place is not around any more, they were a very good source of slightly failed electronic devices.The Marvelous MOV.Metal Oxide Varistor. Their most common use in household common devices is likely surge protectors used for protecting electronic equipment. The only problem I see is I "think" the more times a MOV reaches breakdown the less reliable they become. You may wish to think about Snubber Considerations for IGBT Applications. I just see using a snubber type design verse a MOV as more viable. Not to say it is but likely the direction I would look.
Ron
LOVE IT! Like saying "Slightly dead". Still, I know what you mean. Easy fixes. For a while I watched the local want ads where people were giving away lawnmowers that wouldn't start. They wouldn't start because last fall when they put the machine away they didn't drain all the gas out. Come spring the gas had turned to caramel (not the kind you can eat). All you had to do was clean the carburetor and you had a good functioning machine. Got a big lawn tractor that way. Got LOTS of gas powered equipment. My pressure washer - got two of them. One had a blown motor from nobody checking the oil level and the other one had a cracked pump because they didn't drain the water before storing it for winter. Freezing conditions would crack the pump housings and they would be useless.slightly failed