Agreed, may be you should let him know what some of us feel about his narrative part that is misleading to speed readers who may inadvertently (can you be that diplomatic though
) easily take him out of context. When I shared the Marantz response with him, he even said he understood why Marantz did what they did, but felt they should give users the option.
Regarding the 8802's, if you give one to Amir to measure, I bet he would put it through the similar battery of tests, or find another one to reveal similarly "poor" performance lol. Imo the guy is super technical/objective oriented, and would probably pay little attention to the "audibility" thing. I wonder if he has tested any tube amps but I am going to find out just to see what he would have said about their performance.
By the way, the great 8802 was still using the LSI chip that Dr. Rich said was a real bottleneck as they don't perform better than all but the least expensive DACs. I posted the link to his article a few times before but may be still worth repeating what he said about the 8801:
"A key takeaway: circuit quality in the direct mode (stereo or 7.1) is almost always invariant to AVR prices in the range of $400 to $2,000. As examples, the $250 Yamaha RX-V367 and Marantz AV8801 ($3000) use the same Renesas LSI chip (R2A15220FP). With the LSI analog chip in these products, the sound of the direct mode is relatively constant, although a more robust power supplies, addition a quality output buffer and enhanced DC blocking capacitor quality can make small differences. "
https://hometheaterhifi.com/technical/technical-reviews/options-by-supplier-and-price/
That almost sounded like you talking..
Coming from a PhD in EE, that was eye opening in a sense, that even such a low cost chip (Large scale integrated chip) preamp/vol control could result in such great measurements, yet people still worry so much about DACs and swear they were hearing different kind of sound(s) even just by changing the filer setting between sharp, slow roll off etc. He was wrong (imo) about integrated amps though, but I think it was only because he didn't realize there were so many entry level integrated amps that were like what you and I called "Receiver derived", such as Yamaha low end ones.