Another thing that you may want to try is to be better at debris removal. Trim off old dead or almost dead leaves. When turning yellow and they are heavily spotted, they are not returning to being green and vigorous. Trim off old dead pseudobulbs. You can dust every cut with plain old cinnamon! Cinnamon is very effective at preventing the spread of diseases and it should be handy and cheap. I use a small child's paintbrush to apply. Good sanitation is important.
I read where you are getting in new potting supplies. That should help. But I also noticed that every type of orchid you have is in the same mix and that might be bad for some of your plants too. Look at the diameter of a Phalaenopsis root, a Cattleya root and an Oncidium root. Oncidium roots are very slender. Oncidiums love moisture. If you pot them using a coarse mix, one with larger pieces, the mix may not hold enough moisture. I noticed years ago that for me, my Oncidiums do much better in a mix of seedling bark @50%, a 20% addition of seedling sized perlite and 20% seedling size charcoal. There is always about 10% of Leca involved. For me when I water every 4-5 days with my Oncidiums, they are never done dry. They are not soggy or wet but certainly not bone dry. In a coarse mix featuring pieces 3/8", 1/2" or more in size dries out way too fast for my conditions. Under those situations my Oncidium bulbs become deeply furrowed or wrinkled. I take that as a sign that they are not getting enough water. They should be really nice and plump!
I also use plastic pots only for them.
DO all of your pots have drainage holes???
I have been really busy, so I haven't had time to do all the necessary maintenance on all my orchids, I mostly have only been doing maintenance on my prized and favorite ones - the rest kinda got left in the back burner. But I have a 4 day weekend, so I will be repotting and cleaning everything. I do have cinnamon and pure sulfur that I apply when I do trimming, but again. the past year have been crazy busy. So I guess the disease outbreak is a bit of negligence on my part.
I did order 0.3-0.6mm bark, 0.6-0.9mm bark, coarse perlite, medium perlite, 8mm to 14mm charcoal, 8mm to 10mm red lava rock. I also have maybe a scoop or two of 6mm activated carbon, coarse bark, small and large leca, CHC, fine bark chip, that I plan on using up. So hopefully this will give me enough variation to repot everything.
I use 2:1:1:1/4:1/8 small and medium bark chips: medium and coarse perlite: black gold potting soil: char coal: oyster shells for paphs only; it has worked tremendously on paphs.
For cymbidium, zygo and oncidiums, I add an extra scoop of perlite, but I think the media needs to be a bit more course.
For Oncidiums, I use 1.5:1:1:1/4, 0.3 to 0.6mm orchidata bark: medium perlite: Medium charcol: sphagnum. I made the mistake of adding sphagnum moss in the past and retained too much moisture, that's why they perform so poorly and most of my oncidiums keep spider climbing with their new pseudobulb, which I am not very experienced with repotting climbers. So this weekend, I will do a more coarse combination for the oncidiums.
All my pots of drainage holes. I also have a few of my "chinese takeout containers" that I drilled some holes in the bottom and side. I usually use a layer of leca at the bottom, then media for extra aeration.
I think the biggest mistake and lesson I learned is that... always make time to maintain orchids and do regular spray or else disease spread really quickly. I am just happy none of my paphs have been affect. This mostly hit my phals, oncidiums, cymbidiums, and zygos