The lognevity of current gear can only be guessed or inferred: the longevity of older gear is well established.
I don't know how well old Quad gear holds up: I'll just assume it has a reputation for "nigh indestructible" and move on. McIntosh has the same reputation. My 2120 is more than 30 years old and was abused by a previous owner (I had to de-rust the thing). I've not actually run it through a bench test (though many have been) but I can find no fault with the sound or output power, and the only failure on the unit is that the bulbs need to be replaced (few lightbulbs last 30 years)
It's better because it's "more self correcting"? Again, this would be best judged with a bench-test of two comparable units. Anything less is pure guesswork (well, a listening test if one unit failed dramatically enough).
Since I'm confident that my 30-year-old Mc will pass any blind listening test, lacking bench results your statement doesn't seem capable of establishing your claim.
So you are claiming that one of the two either did not deliver a flat response across the frequency range, or lacked sufficient power to drive the speakers.
If I simply assume that the test itself was completely valid (truly blind with statistically significant correlation), then I could conclude that the two units sounded different on those speakers. If I further assume that it was not an issue of insufficient wattage, then one of the two was coloring the sound.
Of course, your test does not say which. It's possible, based on that data, that the Quad amp was the one failing, but failing in a pleasant way.
This is a scenario particularly common in the tube-vs-solid debate. Tubes fail in a way generally considered "more smooth" than solid-state gear (which tends to clip). The proper solution is "get a more powerful amp" in those cases.
To sum my problems with your example, (and that's assuming there's no testing failure cause by placebo effect): you did not compare Quad to McIntosh, which is the question at hand; you have not established enough criteria to know it was apples-to-apples; and it's not clear which one was actually more faithful.
If you can cite a benchmark that shows that Quad has lower NLD than McIntosh (and preferably that the difference is audible to humans, though that's not strictly neccessairy for your case), then that would establish your case as true. Do you know where such data exists?
Great. Sounds like an awesome amp. My 2120 will drive 2Ohm (and possibly 1Ohm, I'd have to go check). Does the 909 run lower? That might also prove your "better amp" claim.
I don't believe that the used Quad market is demonstrably more active than the used McIntosh market. You seem to be showing another similarity. Though it's likely quad has produced fewer models, I don't agree this makes a given amp "better"
The McIntosh Mc250 came out in the same year.
They light bulb went out in my 1978(ish) 2120. Other than that, nothing has been replaced.
There's some similarly fascinating stuff at
http://www.roger-russell.com/aboutmc.htm
But I don't want to miss the forest for the trees. You stated that the Quad was a better amp than (I presume an otherwise comparable) McIntosh. I had asked you how that was established. Did I miss your answer?