Well, no, that doesn't address my question at all.
No, it doesn't.
So the biggest thing I've found is this:
2700/2800 series are nearly identical. 2824 supports more STP stuff I believe, and support 9000 jumbo frames (not not 9014, etc.). If you do a ping -f on the 2724 with jumbo frames enabled it will go to 5000, 5500, 6000, but not 9000 - they get fragmented at that point. Granted that is only useful for iSCSI traffic, and even then it's not 100% necessary, but I like to have 9014+ jumbo frames. I've had a 2724 last me now for years. I was about to buy another 2824 but then started looking at higher models below.
I don't know your needs exactly but I'd recommend a 2824 off ebay for ~$100-$120 if you don't need the more feature-rich 3xxx 5xxx
The thing to know is that the 27xx/28xx series are really just small office switches with minimal management. No LACP. No SNMP (from what I can tell on the 2824, I have a 2724 and it has no SNMP).
The 3xxx series is where real managed switches start to come in with ssh/console/etc. This is where I prefer to start when needing more features. But, the caveat is that the 3xxx is all 100MBps with and without PoE. These are really just cost-effective fully managed switches. 3324, 3424, 3524, etc. I would not recommend going older than a 34xx.
The 5xxx is where you get into the enterprise class switches with gigabit. They offer STP, SNMP, etc. The 54xx are really nice. The 55xx are nice except they use HDMI stacking cables - cheaper than SFP but also weirder and they don't lock in obviously.
I just bought two 54xx off of ebay - a 5424 and a 5448, $71 for the 24 and $103 for the 48 port, both full gigabit, managed, snmp, and iSCSI optimized. That'd be my suggestion but I don't know what you need in full.