it is common for people to confuse pH with strength, the best analogy I know of is to think of fountain solution pH as voltage. Knowing the voltage of a charge gives you some information about it, but not any clue to how much electricity there is. The same holds true for pH in fountain solution, the pH gives a clue as to how acidic a product is, but little or no information on how strong it may be. An example would be a very small amount of sulphuric acid in water will give a very low pH while a highly concentrated boric acid solution will have a much higher pH. The newspaper industry used alkaline pH fountain solutions for decades (pH 9 to 10) and for the last twenty years or so have moved to neutral fountain solutions (6.5 to 8) and acid fountain solutions have long histories of pH values as low as 3.5 (Rosos and Blue Chip, Red Etch, etc) and as high as 5.5 (most European acid fountain solutions). Beliefs that there is a 'correct' pH for printing are empirical and there is little that can be done to change anyones mind about the pH they are comfortable running.
To answer the threads original question I would say "no reason at all", run whatever pH product works for you and you are happy with.