The set of speakers I am fixed on are $800 for the pair (ELAC Uni-fi UF5). I've listened to them and they sound great. I don't think it would be an easy load for my receiver however, due to the 4ohm rating. I have read that my AVR does quite a poor job of pushing 4ohm speakers.
Facts:
UF5 specifications right from Elac:
Nominal impedance - 4 ohm
Sensitivity - 85 dB @2.83v/1m
Maximum power input - 140 Watts
Denon AVR-X3300W bench test results, right from Audioholics:
http://www.audioholics.com/av-receiver-reviews/denon-avr-x3300w-1/measurements
Continuous Full Bandwidth:
2 CFP-BW *105 watts 8-ohms 0.1%
2 CFP-BW 154 watts 4-ohms 0.1%
Dynamic output:
1 Dynamic PWR 322 watts 4-ohms 1%
2 Dynamic PWR 277 watts 4-ohms 1%
Compared to the Emotiva A700's specs, not verified by bench tests:
110 watts 8-ohms <0.1%
210 watts 4-ohms <
1%
Emotiva did not say the ratings were continuous, I am 100% certain that the 210 watts 4-ohm is
not a continuous rating, but there is no need for it to be either.
Based on the above facts and figures, the Emotiva amp is not more powerful than the AVR for two channel use. You may argue that it is marginally or negligibly more powerful on paper but not practically speaking.
The Elac UF may not be easy to drive relatively speaking only. In practical sense, it is limited by it's maximum input rating of 140 watts. So it really doesn't matter, you can't give it more power anyway even if they don't play loud enough for you. If you ignore that fact, and I know you won't, you would risk damaging them.
So bottom line, this setup is fine in a smaller room and if you don't listen to loud music. For such speakers, there is no need to spend money on a separate system.
It is you money though, and you seem to believe what you like to believe, so I think you should go with something you believe is right for you.