Atmasphere, Is there a way to determine an amplifier's lowest point of distortion apriori or is an empirical issue?If the specs are published, its easy, if not, a distortion analyzer is handy.
But as I mentioned, with most amplifiers this is about 5-7% of full power. Having unlimited power is great, but the practical issues around that are profound. If you need that power because you have inefficient speakers, thermal compression will prevent you from ever playing the system all that loud and getting the dynamic contrasts right. One problem that is epidemic with higher powered amps is poor application of loop negative feedback, owing largely to inadequate Gain Bandwidth Product. This causes such amps to sound harsh due to higher ordered harmonic distortion.
This is why efficiency is important in loudspeakers, and there is no reason why a speaker has to trade off anything if resolution is a higher goal. The speakers I'm running at home are 97.5dB, the first breakup of the midrange driver is at 35KHz. So its very fast and smooth. On such speakers you can use lower powered amps and still achieve sound pressures well over 100dB.