If I recall correctly, the XPR-1 was not produced in very high numbers. Emotiva could not source the parts needed to replace them. It was more of an issue of "could not" than a refusal.
I did talk to Emotiva about this because it concerned me. They are willing to repair used and out-of-warranty products, but you have to pay for their repairs as long as they can source parts for it.
So if you are going to buy an Emotiva, I'd stick with the current generation stuff, not one of their older or rarer designs.
Gene would have to clarify, as I was not involved. Obviously I am not Gene.
That does kind of suck... I wonder if they would offer a different solution. Perhaps a discount on a new replacement amp? or some kind of alternative part-mod, so the amp doesn't just become a paperweight?
If I was in their shoes, and literally was in a spot where I could not source a part, then I could not repair an amp either. My 2 solutions would be to offer a discount on a new amp, or offer some kind of modification. I don't know what they were willing to do.
FWIW:
I own an Emotiva XPA-7 gen3 that I bought used off of eBay in Dec. 2019. It has been flawless for 10 months, and a big sonic upgrade over the Denon X4500 amps I was using previously. It was about 1 year old when I bought it.
Emotiva reps helped transfer the warranty from the previous owner (he bought it new) to me.
I was going to probably get a Monolith 7. I had no hard feelings against the Monolith 7, but the used Emotiva was slightly cheaper, and provided more power (250x5) when driven in 5 channel mode. I am still using the Polk LSiM speakers, and the Denon X4500 was REALLY struggling*, running almost too hot to touch.
Ergo, I wanted all the power I could throw towards them.
Interestingly, the bass improved a lot, and the Emotiva runs cool to the touch and doesn't sound strained or distorted any at high volumes.