Why the hate for mcintosh amps?


Why dont people,like mcintosh? Who motivates this?

so what are the alternatives??
emergingsoul
@roxy54, Yes.
  I answered the OP’s question. And while I don’t care for the Mc sound, I don’t want to just keep dumping on them. I think I’ve said enough.
Unsound, you said:
"Autoformers in ss amps for the last 50 years only serve to compromise one of the advantages of ss amps with typical dynamic speakers, that of adapting power requirements with impedance load."
I didn't understand that comment, as the autoformers do exactly that; that is, they allow the amplifier to deliver full power into any impedance. 
It’s funny how using the right words brings out the ones those words attract the most, the haters. I’ve owned more high end amplifiers than most and currently own a pr of Mcintosh MC611 monos. They’re one of the best amps I’ve ever owned. For all those haters “stop hating everything you don’t like”. As for the original thread post. Why don’t people like Mcintosh. What makes you think people don’t like Mcintosh? 
unsound,
I don't think that you were dumping on them, it was just your opinion. I am still curious about the comment about the autoformers though.
Why do people -- i.e., audiophiles -- "hate" or dislike McIntosh?  It's an interesting question.  I gave it some thought and came up with three reasons:

1.  McIntosh is, by repute, the brand for doctors and lawyers -- i.e., presumably well-to-do people who just want fancy, expensive, nice-looking equipment for their living rooms and dens, without really knowing anything about high-end audio.  Thus, knowledgable audiophiles will look down on such unknowledgable buyers.  (Let me stress that I don't think this is a good reason -- but it is a reason!)

2.  McIntosh amps use older, unfashionable technologies -- primarily autoformers.  They are not, in any technical sense, state-of-the-art.  Thus, knowledgable audiophiles, who appreciate the latest technical advances in the audio arts, disdain McIntosh equipment as stuck in the past.

3. McIntosh amps do not have a "hi-fi" sound.  To audiophiles searching for a hyper-detailed presentation, they may seem "veiled" or rounded off.  This may be particularly true for audiophiles who primarily listen to amplified music.  

I should add, in the interest of full disclosure, that I have owned and enjoyed an MC402 power amp for over a dozen years. I've changed speakers, sources, power cords and cabling during that time, but I've never seen any reason to get a new amp.  I listen to about 80% classical and 20% hard rock, and I find the MC402 does everything I want.