A point, which I concede was a surprise to me, was that there are apparently so many preamp outputs in the world that clip at 1Vrms or perhaps a few dB above that, which is just bad design. But if that's the case (which I'm sorry I can't confirm reading the receiver tests posted here), it's worth knowing. You could have stopped right there.
The noise point was an exaggeration, the cable impedance point was inaccurate, the amplifier gain/bandwidth and DC offset points were irrelevant, the preamp load point was inaccurate and cited an unrealistic load condition...all of this and more has been clearly spelled out.
Examples...make them realistic, not extreme. Scale the example to probability...what real world chances are there that my Onkyo AVR can't drive my Emotiva amp? IF an extreme example is necessary, how about a specific to watch for, like "the BIGGIE3 AVR preamp out and the XTC amp don't work well together because the AVR output clips at 1Vrms and the XTC amp needs 5Vrms for maximum output." But, if most amps are fine with 2Vrms, and most preamp outputs clip at 2.2Vrms, say so. You gave many specific examples of preamp outs with plenty of headroom, no examples of those with clip levels so low as to be a problem.
And then, what would be REALLY nice is, measure and publish the preamp clip point and output impedance in all reviews. While you're at it, how about along with input sensitivity, measure and publish the input impedance on power amps? The reviews that Gene writes are quite complete (though still missing amp input Z tests), the other reviewers, not so much. Since I was accused of not being familiar with the technology, and told I should read the reviews, I did. Dozens of them, right here. Those figures are missing from all of them, except the ones Gene does, where he states the pre-out clip point. If preamp/amp match is such a huge deal, we need that info tested and published, both out clip and in Z. But what I suspect is, since input impedance of amps is usually found in the spec sheet, and is 50K or higher most of the time, it's viewed as unnecessary to publish in a review. But then, don't cite the one-off 600 ohm input as an example without naming it! (BTW, didn't that device have an input termination switch that would change that from 600 to something much higher?)