ADTG, I'm curious why Nathan's plate amp isn't on your list. It seems the ideal fit: plenty of power (both continuous and burst voltage swing), DSP, fair price, and no extra box in your room. Do you not have a power outlet near where you want to put it?
Electro-voice is a lot more than I want to pay.
Yeah, that CC swipe wasn't fun...
I wonder how much cheaper they'd be if made in China, rather than Germany.
Dayton SA1000 is interesting. 950watts/4ohm/20lb/$425 (shipped).
I'd say, comparing specs like with like, that the power is closer to 750W. BUT, don't forget attractive faceplate, auto-on and 12V trigger, band of parametric EQ, continuous phase control, and input sensitivity compatible with any consumer audio gear. Also, significant short-term voltage swing, which is useful for driving subs.
Crown XLS interest me since they are high powered, light (8 - 10 lbs), good Rep with user reviews and pro crowd. A XLS comparable to the Dayton SA1000 is the XLS1000 (1100watts/4ohm/bridged) and it's $300 delivered vs $ $425.
While continuous power is less, the SA1000 can swing more peak voltage than the XLS1000. Probably the XLS1500 as well.
Peavey is cheaper, but what quality vs Crown?
Parts quality equal or better. Technology equal or possibly better, with the caveat that they basically have
no heatsinking inside so the fans run constantly. Faceplate looks/feels cheaper. Useful for consumer gear (like the unbalanced miniDSP) because the input required for full power is just 0.775V, as opposed to double that for the Crown. However, the effing blue LED's just don't stop. Even if it's hidden, the light-show may make it visible.
Peavey has for a long time claimed that they would offer an "adult" version of the IPR with better casing and fewer stupid blue LED's, the
Crest Pro-Lite series. The Pro-Lites are, to date at least, sadly vaporware.