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btw before this thread goes any further: mr. OP are you asking about emotiva amps or as you said, EMOTIVE amps?
You don't need to sink major $$ in high end amps.The sound is 90% speakers and acoustics .... 10% electronics.
Do you want everything to sound warm? Is your goal to listen to your gear, or to music? Please take this as a question for all audiophiles to be constantly on guard of: can you handle the truth? Not saying Emotiva offers the ultimate audio truth, just posting a yellow caution sign on the road to audio honesty. At Axpona Emotiva openly displayed the guts of their receivers (don't recall seeing that from any other manufacturer, OTOH they are big and had a large display). But their guts looked very well built/designed (versus sculpted faceplates or glowing tubes), representing a good baseline for all to follow.Disclosure: I did pick up a Emotiva DC-1 ($500 prosumer DAC/pre-amp/headphone amp) at Axpona, my first Emotiva purchase, which seems to be well built and from early auditioning offers a solid sonic value.
So if your electronics are lacking, ie not resolving the recorded material to the best extent, then how do you think this affects the eventual sound produced by the speakers? Don't you think your speaker's performance is directly tied to your electronics' capabilities? Do you not believe an automobile's performance is directly linked to its drivetrain? I pose these questions, because you suggest higher end electronics aren't worthwhile, but higher end speakers are. I 100% disagree. Speakers don't make a system any more than a chassis and wheels make a car. This isn't a bash on more affordable gear, but high end gear has its place just as much as entry and mid-fi stuff does. I will concede that the laws of diminishing returns kicks-in pretty hard at a certain point. But that point, in my experience, is so dependent on the listener's preferences, goals, acoustics, and experiences, that it is really impossible to put a number on it. And that's why some are completely content with whatever they can get from Best Buy, while others can't rest until their system gets as close to a live performance as possible. Some people are content with a Toyota Corolla. Others must have a BMW. If your goal is to get as close to recreating the sound of a live performance using entry and mid-if electronics with high end speakers, you'd be mistaken. You can't put a Toyota Corolla engine and drivetrain in a BMW and expect the best. I'm not saying Emotiva gear is a Corolla drivetrain. I'm just saying that if you can afford better, there is better to be had. I don't think Emotiva owners would dispute that. Emotiva gear is intended to be high value gear with very good quality and performance.....and there's a lot to be said for that. Having these kinds of options for those who can't jump feet first into a $100k system, let alone a $5k system, is good for the home audio hobby as much as the Mazda MX5 is good for auto racing and car clubs.
Emotiva now has a retail presence. We have had them at the store where I work for about 2 weeks now. We brought in a large part of their product line up. As others have stated, they offer great value. They are not high end but for what you are paying they are competing with much more expensive products. They do require run in. The amps definitely sound better after a week of constant run in. Will they make your system sound as good as a piece from Ayre or Bryston? No, but they are a fraction of the cost. We brought them in to give Maggie owners an option of good power with a minimum investment.
On the other hand, a spark plug is a spark plug regardless of how much you sink into it--although I suppose you could buy one made out of platinum and diamonds. Think it would give a better spark? Maybe that's a better analogy. For me, agreed, I'd put 90% into speakers.