I would suggest it is just in your brain. I've heard the 92 drive 4 ohm speakers so loud it hurt with no clipping. It isn't even rated for 4 ohms. The rated power output is real. It is THX certified. The amps in your receiver are as strong as most separate amps. Using them won't hurt a thing. they run as cool as a cucumber and probably cooler than your separate. Seriously, try it.
Yes, I have noticed how cool this thing runs. Coolest of any receiver I have messed with. I tried it with receiver amps only, its fine. I think I still like all the extra headroom though, plus its my sence of augmentation that will keep me using the power amp.
I beleive I have my answer on the A/B setup as the dealer did a test with the VSX94 they have on display. It works just like mine. So mine is not broke, but I say this is still a design flaw. For whatever reason (one I want to find out), the Elite receiver must be designed differently from the lower end Pioneers on the A/B speakers controls relative to the preouts. To me, its a much slicker way to handle this in the darn cheaper models. I mean, if you can control volume, tone, and other stuff of the signal going into a separate power amp, then you should be able to shut it off from the receiver too.
Oh.. and there was one line found in the manual that supports the above findings.
"to hear sound only from the pre-outs, switch the speaker system to OFF (that is the A/B switch I have been refering to), or simply disconnect any speakers that are connected directly to the receiver"
Also in reverse would this imply: that if the front preouts are occupied with a separate amp the front speaker terminals on the receiver still would work if connected? If this is true, is that normal logic for audio.