It just doesn't seem fair.
The Crown XLS 1500 is $350 delivered, and it's 300wpc x 2ch 8ohm, 525wpc x 2ch 4ohm, & 775wpc x 2ch 2ohm. And it weighs 8lbs, not 80lbs.
And it's silent to my ears. I can't even hear the fan noise. The fan noise was my main concern.
A comparable ATI, Parasound, Sunfire, etc, 300wpc stereo amp would be like $2K.
The Emotiva XPA-2 is $800 for 300wpcx 2ch.
I guess the pro amps just look kind of ugly, as already mentioned.
Price/performance-wise the only place "home" amps are remotely competitive to the newest generation of "pro" amps is in multichannel formats. And that simply because the pro market doesn't demand 5+ channels in a single chassis.
Yes, there are some more expensive 5+ channel pro models, such as the 1 RU (!) LexiCrown* at 125Wx8 (into 4Ω or 8Ω), the Ashly amps with or without DSP, the Powersoft Ottocanalis, and of course my new favorite amp, the ElectroVoice CPS 8.5. But most of them don't have 12V triggers (the LexiCrown and EV ones do) and also there's the fan issue. But still, it'll generally either cost more or take more real estate (or both) to match a decent entry-level NRTL-certified home multichannel amp, such as an Anthem PVA7. (Nobody, of course, should be considering non-NRTL certified amp. The pro amps are all as a rule NRTL certified, because their market isn't filled with as many ignorant soothsayers as the home audio market. Well, maybe Behringer's aren't. I've never been interested in buying one, so I've never looked...)
But for people who can hide their amps and have enough space for a tall rack, the only thing one loses by going pro is...well, nothing.
*I use "LexiCrown" as a shorthand for the
Lexicon DD-8 and
Crown CT8150 twins. It's also worth noting that, unlike Lexicon's naked attempt at rent-seeking with the LexOppo BDP-83, the LexiCrown is more befitting of a company like Harman: same basic part, but with I/O and front panel tailored to it brand's market, and sold for about the same price through both sales channels.
It would be nice if Audioholics, Stereophile, Home Theater Magazine would review/measure these amps, like the Crown XLS amps. Can they truly output 1000-2000wpc RMS?
I wish Azcel would. Anyone know his e-mail address? I'd like to write him about them. I'd like to see a Crown XLS Drivecore and a Peavey IPR on his Powercube.
Azcel did review a QSC amp a while back. He and Dr. Rich disagreed as to its merits in a home audio system.
I'm actually more interested in what they do when the output level is 1-2 watts.
There's really no rational reason to expect a modern amp to be less linear at low power levels than a 1970s-era circuit...
Even your mentor Aczel doesn't dismiss the possibility that two amps can sound different, he just dismisses the possibility that two amps that measure the same can sound different.
Of course they
can sound different. But they usually don't.
Honestly, I have no clue.... but let's say, maybe the XLS2500 is inflated on the spec sheet. Let's say it only does...oh... 80% of what it's rated under "strict Audioholics testing conditions".
It is Crown, so I'd expect the ratings to be honest.
The Peavey IPR 1600 has been tested, here and in Germany, and are rated honestly. The Berry NU3000 has been tested in Germany, and measured like the IPR 1600 knockoff it is.
They have other challenges...
Only the output filter issue. One reason why, perhaps many Class D amps are best used either for subs, in multiamped speakers with active crossovers designed based on measurements while the tweeters are powered by those amps, or in concert with room correction systems that work over the full bandwidth.
People don't build or buy 1000W compact amplifiers to put out 85db, they're buying them for high volume levels in large spaces.
Nobody I know who owns the McIntosh 1kW monoblocs really rocks out with them... (And I've been in several homes with those, or the slightly smaller ones.)