In the world of computer programming, there's a cliche about bugs in the program. If a bug looks like too much trouble or expense to fix, they say you should "dress it up in a tuxedo and call it a "feature".
About the whole idea of MOSFET technology. This kind of transistor is replacing the older Bipolar Junction Transistors like the CB finals and Toshiba linear transistors we have become used to since they quit using tubes in the 1970s. Time marches on, technology evolves.
If it weren't for the european ban on lead in electronic solder, those parts probably would never have been discontinued. But they were. All of them. Only a few of them were re-tooled as lead-free versions, like the low-power stock final in AM-only radios like a Cobra 29. Any parts made with those numbers now are coming from a third party in China, not from Toshiba or Mitsubishi. The quality level of the original Japan parts was higher than you'll get from China.
Manufacturers had to come up with a lead-free solution. There are MOSFET transistors designed to be rugged RF power amplifiers like the old 2SC1969. Trouble is they cost a few bucks, even in large quantities. The MOSFET transistors they changed over to use are NOT designed for RF. The IRF520, FQP13N10, ERF-2030 were all designed to use as on/off switches. As in, switching DC power on and off 50,000 or so times a second. This is the basis for every "switchmode" power supply. They're found in every AC power supply from the wall wart that charges your phone, inside your overclocked gaming box, light fixtures, etc, etc. The insane production quantity makes them cheap, under a buck. These switchmode transistors will amplify RF power even though they aren't built to do that. But efficiency will be low. This will boost the power supply current you need to produce the same RF power as before.
Any kind of component made in those quantities becomes incredibly cheap. In this case, under a buck, compared to several bucks for a legitimate RF-designed MOSFET.
The RF MOSFET contains protection from high SWR.
The switchmode transistor does not. The MOSFET transistors that are hawked as an "upgrade" are the cheap version, and will pop any time the SWR is at all high for any length of time.
This saves the factory a bundle. And costs the end user when a modest SWR pops his final transistors.
So yeah, smear lipstick on it and call it an "upgrade".
I think I hear my snake squeaking. Time to buy some more oil for it.
73