I guess I have updates as well, which fit with @lewm's statement above. I used some funds from selling the BMC MCCI Signature ULN to acquire a Simaudio Moon 810LP. It is a very different beast from the Audionet PAM G2 / EPS which I documented through this thread, but also different from the BMC. In some ways, it falls between these two units, and part of me is still longing for just a little bit more. This is where I need to ride it out with break in.
I previously described the Audionet as balancing soul, body, and detail, but it surely does not have the snap and immediacy of the BMC. The BMC, on the other hand, I found to have unparalleled clarity and separation, but at times at the expense of the music gelling and flowing, and I found myself listening more analytically vs enjoying the music as a whole.
The Simaudio Moon 810LP definitely has more clarity and separation than that of the Audionet, but it is not as pronounced as my experiences with the BMC. The 810LPs tone is very natural, and the pacing and presentation is just wonderful and holographic. It is still just a tad bit dry for my tastes, but I would probably think differently if the bass and midbass filled in a little bit more. And here's where I hit the snag. For some reason, the bass and midbass is just weak, and it makes the unit sound thinner and more dry. I bought the unit as a distributor demo, but it never really had any use. What I've heard is that it takes up to 500 hours to fully break in and settle, and I'm only on about 60-75 of those hours. I may also need to play with the loading, which is a bit frustrating because it is under the unit and requires me to disconnect cables to adjust. What's worse, as Lew mentions above, it takes about 203 hours after powering the unit on before it fully warms up and sounds great again, so many have advised me to leave the unit on at all times.
The unit has only 40,000uF of capacitance reservoir, which is still quite high, but nowhere near the 100,000uF of the BMC or the 250,000uF of the Audionet. Perhaps the 820s power supply could help me achieve what I feel is missing, but overall the 810LP is a very admirable unit, and I'm betting the break in period will be revelatory.
If anyone else has an 810LP (hint @rauliruegas), I would appreciate if you weigh in on your break in experience if you had to endure it!