I agree that trying to make things lighter and cheaper is not the way to go. It even says that on Emotiva's site. Weight and cost were in mind. Don't be sacrificing those things! Yeah you have the old gen which is probably a tank. Not sure if I trust the new ones, and I don't want to buy someone's used gear either, who knows how well they've taken care of it.
I think a beefy amp, that has a beefy transformer with good laminations and we'll winded, will outperform a switching supply with less noise and interference. Slapping a cheap transformer in with no chemical treatment, cheap insulation, no laminations or anything to offset the losses, hum, eddy currents, emf, etc. might be a bad product, but same with a cheap SMPS with no filtering technology. But if you put enough effort, quality and care into each of them, you can make either great products. Problem is, that costs money, and most companies aren't willing to go that extra mile, even for the consumer willing to spend for that quality. I still think that a well built transformer core (toroidal specifically) design will beat a well built SMPS design, just because of the law of electricity. Until I see hands-on that they've mastered the art of SMPS, including the life expectancy of them, I'll stick to what's TT&T.
I do really like the specs and looks of the Monolith. That will be my next stop if I am not impressed with my Anthem STR.