I used the formulae that were referenced in the data sheet for the NC400 amplifier and attached as a screen shot to the post. I had no idea whether they were standardized (appears from your post that they are not since you're coming up with completely different numbers).
The formula in the screenshot are correct, same as mine in my spreadsheet so the result should be the same.
square root of 300 W X 6 ohm/10^(2.58/20) (again, that's what's shown in the screenshot you attached).
sqrt(300*6)/10^(25.8/20) = 2.18 V
Can you double check your calculations?
What should my target be in that regard? I found a user's review of the Outlaw 976 here:
https://www.avnirvana.com/threads/outlaw-audio-model-976-7-2-surround-processor-review.3778/. It contains some testing results and references noise floor and THD from the test, but not sure that paints any clearer of a picture than Outlaw's own specs.
I have no idea how Mathew did his measurements. It look like a bunch of graphs plotted with REW and a mic but I only took a quick glance.
So would you say the cost of going with a preamp and separate components generally isn't justified if you're going with a good AVR and separately amplifying the front channels for stereo usage? Or is that just a generalization for the price range on which I'm currently focusing?
I am not the go by ears kind of guy as from my years of experience, preamps/amps that measured well all sounded well to me. Subjective reviews are all over the place, one person will tell you amp A sounds better while another person will say no, amp B sounds much better and all tend to listen with both ears and eyes.
So yes, I trust the X3600H and X4500H will do well with your speakers, that really is the bottleneck, not the amps, assuming your listening level do not require max peak output to exceed the device limit. It is the recording quality of the media and the speakers that often determine sound quality, not whether it is one of those AVRs or an Outlaw 976, or anything else. That's just what I believe, could be wrong.