A $9,000 two channel amp is not a value-oriented product under any circumstances. I do understand wanting the industrial design of the McIntosh, and I suppose people think they need something like 450 watts/ch (Gene, the owner of this site, thinks he does), but there are other ways to get very similar power and performance for less money.
20 is low. In this article by Richard Pierce, he's more in the 50 range:
Much ballyhoo surrounds the concept of "damping factor." It's been suggested that it accounts for the alleged "dramatic differences" in sound between tube and solid state amplifiers. The claim is
www.audioholics.com
If you have a speaker that dips to 2 ohms or below, and there are several speakers in this category, you probably want a damping factor that is much higher. Note that the chart on page 2 of the article assumes a speaker with an impedance minima of 6 ohms, which is not common these days. Many speakers I've seen measured on this site and ASR have impedance minima below 4 ohms, and some below 2 ohms.