Yes I'm well aware. I brought this up about Integra long before the ASR measurements of Pioneer/Onkyo.
The Integra DRX-4.3 AV receiver sports the latest in HD audio/video with 9 amplified channels on-board, expandable to a 7.1.4 speaker configuration. Our review discusses its performance and shortcomings.
www.audioholics.com
Onkyo has very aggressive protection circuits and this was from a linear AB design. I did note it wasn't well suited for 4 ohm speakers but in real world, they drove moderately sensitive 8 ohm speakers just fine. If the LX505/RZ50 were as bad as ASR made them out to be, they wouldn't be among the most popular AVRs on the market with 1000s of satisfied owners. It's important to keep things into perspective and it's absolutely ridiculous to run a receiver amplifier for 35 sec or however long that test was and expect it not to shut down or thermally limit. This is a classic case of gotcha "journalism".
To be fair to Onkyo - traditionally, their flagships have handled 4ohm nominal speakers very well... but the RZ50/LX505 is not a flagship model, but an upper mass-market model.
The later released RZ70 and LX805 (and 8.4) are in the Flagship range, and although I have not seen any tests yet, I would expect that those would handle such loads without any trouble.
In past generations I have owned past equivalents to these - Onkyo SR876 and Integra DTR70.4, both handled my 4 ohm speakers with 1.6 ohm "dips" - very well.
I currently have the Integra DRX 3.4 - and it did not sound good on my speakers - but used as a hybrid pre-pro - with a decent power amp on front L/C/R - the end result is excellent, with the 3.4 driving surrounds and heights.
So people should be aware of the limitations of the mid range models - they are designed for 8ohm speakers - can theoretically handle 4 ohm speakers, but only if they are "true" 4 ohm, and not the sort that have 4 ohm nominal with dips dropping substantially down below 2ohm....