Because it was inexpensive and available and capable of doing the job at hand. I mean: you can go pay a lot more for the Mark Levonsons rather than the Crown so that you get that spiffy logo; if that's your thing.
Figured it was price. I find the "cheap is good, expensive is bad" mantra on AH to be rather farcical. "Good is good and bad is bad" seems so much more logical, don't you think?
most consumer applications the advantages of 2v are academic rather than audible. What's your point?.
If you feed a lower voltage signal (like from an AVR or consumer pre-amp) into a pro amplifier set up for 2v input, you won't achieve the gain you're paying for. Also, you'll just be amplifying the noise floor or the input signal. I just don't see any value in that.
Yes. XLR is better, but not so much better in consumer use that consumer gear is forced to switch. Again: what's your point?
So you're paying for a capability in an amp (XLR) that you can't exploit with most consumer gear. Also, since XLR is electrically connected to chassis ground on pro gear, you're creating a dangerous situation if you connect XLR to consumer gear, which is double insulated. Shorts in the pro gear could energize the consumer gear chassis, which is not grounded. But, hey, if you want hair like Orphan Annie, be my guest...
It seems like you've just agreed that pro gear is better (while arguing that said better is not necessarily a suseful improvement over sufficient).
Nope. Never said that. It is rare to find pro gear that has lower distortion and SNR than consumer gear... because noise isn't as big a concern in public spaces. A quiet room is around 30 dB. A public space is much higher.
Oh... and if you want me to provide examples, you first.
What happened to your claim that pro amps make speakers sound bad when listening to music? I'm still waiting on support for your base claim.
I don't know what happened to it, Jerry. Probably because I didn't say it. Somebody else did.
So you're going to be waiting a very long time for me to respond on a point I didn't make.