Paulwp-
I'm not saying it's a bad amp. It sounds like it was well engineered for its price point. But that doesn't stop the marketeers.
Your last post sounds like the old "Instantaneous Peak Power" ratings that amps got in the 70's, before the FTC stepped in. You had 1 watt amps delivering 2000 watts of instantaneous peak power.
Refering to my previous post, the power delivered to a load of resistance r with a current of 40 amps is 40^2 times r, or 1600 times r.
So if they claim delivery of 40 amps at 8 ohms, that implies 12,800 watts delivered.
At 4 ohms, that's 6,400 watts.
At 2 ohms, 3200 watts.
At 1 ohm, 1600 watts.
In other words, just saying the amp can deliver 40 amps doesn't really tell you anything by itself. You need to know for how long, into what impedance, and over what bandwidth.
Otherwise it might mean that the amp can deliver 40 amps for just the quarter second it takes for the line fuses to blow, or the protection circuitry to activate.