I happened to notice this thread of the modified 2200, I still have two Nad 2700 THX power amps which I modified back in the day for more power and better sound quality. I am not an advanced electronics guy like some here, but I did some things which worked out just fine.
First of all, because we had loud parties with friends I noticed that the amp always at full volume played couple of beats with really nice authority and then it lowered the volume automatically and then kept that level. And when I opened it, I noticed that there was a one small component limiting the current connected in series to the powerboard. I don't remember was there only one in total or one per channel but you get the idea. So I just took it off/bypassed, since it was heating anyway.
My friend said "I bet the amp will break soon since you did that" but did not happen, I took the limiter components off from both amps and played years after that without any problems. In fact, they never broke. The build quality was good enough. I guess it was just an extra precaution from the factory.
I also added some extra wiring here and there to main voltage circuits to reduce the internal resistance for minimizing the losses, then I doubled the big higher voltage main capacitors by adding another two "floating" on top of circuit board since there was no space anywhere else. I had tested the amp 1 channel loaded with a resistor in a water bucket before the mods, it at first showed the promised 300 watts RMS, but only for a few seconds and then it fell, just like I heard at the parties the volume go down, to 192 watts and it stayed there then.
And after the modifications, the power measured still from the same 1 channel, gave 444 watts and stayed there "forever". So truly continuous RMS over doubled, no more annoying limiters.
So that made the device sound totally different at loud volumes, finally it played like I wanted powerwise. I also changed the output relays to better ones, since originals were too worn out. Worn speaker relays cause the channel to fade out sometimes, there simply is no contact anymore.
At the time, I saw some people change the OP amps of the input board where the rca connectors are, I also tried that with some higher quality ones, but it was only a slight improvement. So I figured, why not get rid of the whole input board and the two front panel potentiometers for level adjustment too. So I completely bypassed those and soldered cables directly from the rca to the main boards, which worked just fine (to my surprise). That did limit the maximum gain somewhat if the source level was very quiet but never too much for my needs, there still was enough gain, which was then of course, not adjustable anymore.
After that final mod the sound was more detailed and easy on the ears somehow.
To the end I just want to add, that while these amps are old, they are still not failing all the time, so they are not hopeless to maintain or anything like that, sometimes you might need to do something yes, but nothing impossible. Good luck!