Watts and power


Can somebody break it down in layman's terms for me? Why is it that sometimes an amp that has a high watt rating (like, say, a lot of class D amps do) don't seem to always have the balls that much lower rated A or AB amps do? I have heard some people say, "It's not the watts, it's the power supply." Are they talking about big honkin' toroidal transformers? I know opinions vary on a speaker like, say, Magnepans - Maggies love power, right? A lot of people caution against using class D amps to drive them and then will turn around and say that a receiver like the Outlaw RR2160 (rated at 110 watts into 8 ohms) drives Maggies really well! I'm not really asking about differences between Class D, A, or AB so much as I am asking about how can you tell the POWER an amp has from the specs? 
redstarwraith
I have Acoustic Elegance 15 inch woofers. 140 Ohm impedance at Fs. Fs is 21 Hz. In the enclosure, Fs is 32 Hz. Again, 140 Ohms at 32 Hz.

The above mentioned fabulous amp. One of the most powerful available.
3000Watts @ 8 Ohms. 6000Watts @ 4 Ohms. 12,000Watts @ 2 Ohms.

Let's go the other way;
1500Watts @ 16 Ohms. 750Watts @ 32 Ohms. 375Watts @ 64 Ohms. 187.5Watts @ 128 Ohms.

Now my poor tube amps.
140Watts @ 8 Ohms. 120Watts @ 4 Ohms. ???Watts @ 2 Ohms.

The other way;
160Watts @ ....... everything above. Therefore @ 16. 32. 64. 128 etc. it just keeps on chukin'

The average 400Watt SS amp;
400 @ 8, 200 @ 16, 100 @ 32, 50 @ 64, and, are you ready? 25Watts @ 128 Ohms.

Please correct me if I made a mistake.


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audiozenology"someone could build a Class D amp that can put 1500 watts into 2 ohms and sell it for <$400??  The benefits of modern manufacturing and a high volume sourcing chain, not to mention a lower margin market"

And the result,  of such "modern manufacturing" is a product that sounds awful but hey it's a "lower margin market" so that is to be anticipated and expected.
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