Thank you for your detailed explanation. Which European multichannel amps do you advise? I’ve looked into the following options:
Marantz MM8077
Emotiva XPA-9 (one box solution, but 65 watts for Atmos speakers? I use the Klipsch RP-500SA’s and use them as DEAS.
Rotel RMB-1585
Yamaha MX-A5000 or MX-5200 (one box solution)
I'm not convinced a boat load of amps in one box is a good idea.
What you might want to do is think about using a good three channel one for the front three and let the receiver power the rest.
Other wise to use 2 channel amps. Now we have all these channels to worrya bout powering, I think you can make a good case for rack mounted 2 channel amps, like those from Crown or QSC and neatly rack mount them. They are class D, but in home theater that is not such a bad idea as it is energy efficient. It also is more cost effective.
Using two channel power amps of good pedigree is ideal, however it takes a lot of space, and requires attention to powering and cooling.
The engineering problem is quite significant. That is my room when it was under construction.
To do this properly requires and amp controller, with a system of 24 volt starting relays, magnetic shunt breakers and a quiet air extraction system for cooling.
A robust and reliable separate system for 9 channels, especially if you are externally powering the subs, is a very arduous and complex engineering proposition.
They don't tell you all that in the ads and mags.
The number of amps we have now in receivers is absolute insanity. So either of the solutions I mentioned make some sense, especially using a neat and tidy installation with class D pro amps makes a lot of sense.
Doing a really robust 7.2.4 or bigger system is now I feel well beyond the scope and expertise of the average consumer enthusiast. I think this is going to lead to a lot of sore heads and grief, mainly due to reliability issues.
A good 2.1 or 3.1 system starts to look a better and better prospect all the time, when you count all the real costs which are far from just measured in dollars, cents, Euros or pounds.