Sherwood is one the oldest if not the oldest reg manufaturer around and I have noticed when working on some of the older Sherwood regs that they breathe very good - far better than they have any right to breathe given the otherwise average downstream unbalanced design. I suspect they were just well made and squeezed every bit of potential out of the design.Some of the older regs were really great performers. I have a Sherwood Oasis + (circa 1980's) that is bullet proof and a great breathing reg. Heavy duty , American made, good stuff. I haven't found the more recent incarnations of the Oasis to be as good.
Regulator performance has not significnatly improved over the last 25-30 years. Most "new" developments have centered around plastic cases and similar changes in materials to cut production costs and unfortunately this has often meant a slight decrease in performance. And the European Norm free flow resistance requirement that serves mostly to detune second stages has further added insult to injury.Maybe the vintage thing is a good idea, IF THEY USE THE ORIGINAL PARTS AND/OR DESIGN.
So in essence much of the "vintage" appeal in some regs is that the regs of the era were of much higher quality and were designed to last a diver for his or her entire career. No cheap plastic and no designed obsolesence.
If manufacturers build the quality back into vintage designs I suspect they will sell very well and that people would in fact probably pay a bit more for them.