While a 16 ohm speaker may seem to "present an enormously easy load for virtually any power amplifier", such is not necessarily the case, as that 16 ohm rating is merely nominal. For instance, the original Quad ESL's nominal impedance was 16 ohms, but it’s impedance rose to 60 ohms at low frequencies, and fell to 1.8 ohms at high frequencies---anything but an easy load! That impedance characteristic is one reason the sound of the Quad ESL is so affected by the amp driving it, and why almost no solid state amp is a good match---it makes for overblown bass and missing highs. Ralph Karsten of Atma-Sphere has already explained this a few times.
Related to my post above, using the lowest impedance tap on a tube power amp not only usually results in the lowest distortion and best sound the amp is capable of, but the amp’s damping factor is also highest, leading to the flattest frequency response it is capable of, irrespective of speaker impedance characteristics.