I’m sure the Outlaws would like to have had their higher power amplifiers ready for shipping a while ago, but if testing revealed any problems, Outlaw certainly would not want to ship a product that subsequently garners a bad reputation – far worse in the long run than introducing a reliable, high-quality product later. I think the 7125 trade up deal is an innovative sales method though it is certainly not convenient for those who already know they want 200 watts or more per channel.
If the higher power amps had been ready when originally anticipated, then the ‘high end’ would have preceded the ‘low end.’ Important: I use ‘low end’ only in reference to price points within the Outlaw product range. I think most people will find Outlaw’s ‘low end’ quite a bit above the fray in terms of audio quality. Compared to all that is out there, I would say Outlaw begins at a ‘mid or upper mid level’ and goes up from there, even on their lowest priced items. Outlaw has no ‘low end’ products in the usual sense of the audio market.
Which leads me to ‘Outlaw Combo (970/7075 or 970/7125) vs. Japanese Receiver.’ OK, the JR will have more easily saleable specs at what is likely a lower price than the OC in the 'mass market.' However, I don’t recall reading anywhere that anyone who stepped into an OC from a JR ended up saying, “Y’know, the JR was just as good.” And there have been plenty of JR reviews that end up reporting that when all channels are driven hard, the sound quality drops. So the ‘sell’ might be an uphill climb for the lower-priced Outlaw gear, but it will likely still have a market. If I were Outlaw watching the 950 being still being ‘consumed’ as a used product on Audiogon and Ebay for reasonably strong prices, I would think having a new pre/pro product available at $400 less than the 990 would make good sense.
I’m glad to have Outlaw selling a broad range of products to support the overhead necessary for a successful company to maintain itself, do R&D and compete. The more sales they have, the less overhead each unit will carry in its individual sales price, thus a reasonably good sales volume at a lower mid level, in addition to other sales, will help keep the price of ‘high-end’ performing gear from being ‘near high-end priced.’