I’ve had a rear css rim for 6 years now. The braking advantage remains good and much better than a non css rim.
The thought occurred how long a css rim is likely to last and if at some point it would be necessary to fit a rear disc brake.
I have had the CSS rims on my Thorn Nomad for the past 13 years. The braking did get to the point, about 5-6 years ago where the carbide had worn off and the Swissstop Blue pads were working really bad in the wet. I converted to standard brake pads and that improved things a lot.
In early 2021 I converted the whole bike to hydraulic disc brakes - a new Rohloff hub-cap and the 2019 Thorn disc fork with a new SON28 disc dynohub. That was fantastic for braking but I did have two glitches:
1. In mid 2022 I found a crack in the front fork rack-mounts. cleaning off by my LBS showed it to be into the fork-blade. Thorn/SJS were very useless; when I asked for their opinion they went 'full-lawyer' and denied any liability, even trawling my FB page to claim I was running rear panniers on the front rack, a thing I have NEVER done. It became clear to me when comparing the old & new forks that the narrower rack mount with the 5mm bolts had a reduced radius of brazing to hold it against lateral stresses ( I have been running Tubus Duo racks since 2011 when I made this bike up). Eventually I just got the fork fixed by my LBS, a skilled frame builder. He removed the rack-mounts, TIG-welded a plate to strengthen the fork then TIG-welded the rack-mount onto the plate. Not pretty but it is tough.
2. Beware of braking power with the discs, especially on the front. I had one bad low-speed fall where I believe that I was relying too much on the front brake and skated the front tyre off on some loose gravel on concrete water-channel bridge. I was pretty severely injured from a 'bag-of-spuds' fall onto concrete.
However overall, disc-brakes work very well for me on tours of all types. I have had very little maintenance required, only replacing the pads once for both front and rear. Each time I was a bit foxed, thinking the brakes needed bleeding when actually a new brake pad fixed the brake issue. No new cables, no cable adjustments, just damn-fine braking. I reckon the rims, now 13 years old with no more rim wear will outlast me.