Hi Joe,
The problem wasn't with the TO-3 packaging (all metal cap attached to the thick metal base); it was the germanium guts inside that were fragile. Cold, there was no problem, but when they were hot, they "broke" easily. Same pricipal as an incondescent light bulb... cold, they're fairly rugged and can take the vibration and jarring that occurrs during shipment, but don't bang on a light bulb that's "on" and has a hot filament or you'll break it. And, since the Orion power amps were located in the bottom of the cabinet (not even close to the bass reflex vent), they didn't get much air flow to cool them off, so they ran hotter than usual. Take an extra hot light bulb and thump it with your finger, and 99% of the time the filament will break. Same thing with the early TO-3 transistors used in the Orion series. Dynaco used the same type and vintage power transistors in their first SS stereo amps with much success, but they had much better cooling (the heat sink fins were HUGE and were exposed), and they were never torn down and thrown around by 220 pound roadies when they were still "finger-burning" hot. Hope this helps.