I can't speak about modern Taurus, because I've not bought one in years.
I can say that I've never seen a 92/99 with issues.
I can say that I had a Model 85 in the Eighties, and - while the gun was beautifully finished - it quickly developed light strikes. (I notice others here have the same complaint.) Traded it off after sending it back. I can say that I had a .41 Magnum all-Titanium 5-shot that worked fine for the short time I kept it. I can say that I fired a 5-shot Taurus .44 Special that was simply lovely - a gun I'd love to own . . . and I gave the guy my card and said, "You're nuts if you ever sell it, but if you ever think about it, call me."
I can say that I've handled more than two (a 94, a .380 revolver and at least one .357) brand-new Taurus revolvers in the stores over the last 15 years and found them out-of-time from the factory. Amazing rotational shake on a .380 quasi-I-frame that had a c. 14-lb-DAO pull. And I can say that I've heard several detailed Taurus customer service horror stories from people on various on-line forums (conveying sufficient detail and hurt regret to make me believe they weren't just making it up) - I've got one up on another screen right now, but I don't want to link it here b/c I'm not sure if that would violate a rule.
Your experience may be different - I hope it is. Every so often I'll come back to the idea of buying a Taurus (the cute little 94, for instance, which Mas Ayoob has written he's found to be more accurate than the S&W 34, or a nice used 92), but I always get nervous when it comes time to pull the trigger. I'd love for this to change (Hyundai is an example of a company that's doing an admirable job of changing perceptions), but it's not there for me yet.
That said, I hope your 65 treats you well - and there's no reason to think that's impossible. I've got a friend who's had one since '85, and he loves it and shoots the pants off it. If you have a good gun, don't worry about the rest of them, eh?