Is your seating distance from the speakers far? Large room? Even if you knock the sensitivity down to 90dbs, it should drive them wo clipping. Not sure of the phase angles and where the lowest dips occur so I cant say for sure. As for AH I haven't seen a bias, in fact I know of no other publication that puts AVRs and amps thru as complex testing. You can always pick up a Crown pro amp to drive the mains only. But as far as the review goes, it's a 399 5 channel amp, with "smaller" transformer as Peng mentioned, so I'd take it all with a grain of salt if your expectations were too high. Sorry that it might not be driving your speakers the way you hoped (Btw I liked BG speakers) if it were me I'd take measurements to verify what you are hearing.
Both, it is a big room, 23x29x8, and certainly not nearfield at 12' from speaker to MLP.
I'll admit my expectations where pretty high but thats what I've come to expect from Emotiva. I own a LPA1 which retailed for $499 (many years ago now) which actually outputs its rated 225x6 continuous @ 4ohms. I also own a XPA5 which sold for >$1000 and it also meets its spec at 300x5 @4ohms. With that in mind I don't see why $399 for 120x5 would raise any red flags. Emotiva amps have always been a great value and almost always meet spec, or very close to it. I honestly think in this situation an amp that actually puts out 120x5 would make all the difference so in a way all I was expecting was what I was promised.
I think at .58VA per rated watt @ 4ohms the UPA500 has to be the wimpiest amp Emotiva has ever sold. Most Emotiva amps are in the .7-1.2VA per rated watt range (UPA at the lower end, XPA at the higher end), which isn't exactly conservative/over built, but it is reasonable and when you consider the price its still a lot of value. For reference many sources say 1.2VA/watt is the gold standard and some more expensive and more conservatively rated (high-end) amps have 2+VA per rated watt @ 4 ohms. Theres no such thing as a free lunch (or in this case, watt)
AH was with Emotiva from the beginning so you have to imagine they realized all this. This is exactly the kind of info I used to read AH for! But they did worse than said nothing about it, they validated Emotiva power claims and stated it was "honestly rated" in the conclusion.
I think this tells you something: Here is a side by side of the UPA500 and its replacement the A-500 ($499). Almost identical amplifiers with identical power ratings, but notice on
big difference? The transformer in the A-500 appears to be substantially bigger, by the look of it Id guess at least 500-600VA which would put it more in line from what Ive come to expect from Emotiva. And then consider the fact that my UPA500 manual has a typo that states it has a 850VA transformer
.