Amplifier Specification questions


I understand the differences between different classes of amplifiers. Most common amplifiers are Class A/B. Does this mean that all class A/B amplifiers operate in Class A to some point then switch over to Class B when they hit a predefined threshold by the design of the manufacturer. Do some so-called Class A/B amps only operate in Class B? My power amp is designed to operate up to 18 watts Class A before changing class of operation. I assume this number is in 8 ohms. My amp is rated at 150 watts into 8 ohms and 300 into 4 ohms. Does this mean that Class A rating will double to 36 watts in 4 ohms or will it stay at 18 watts regardless. What's funny is I was thinking I needed more power because my meters were always pretty well deflected but after looking closer, I realized the meters were on the 5-WATT scale instead of the 150-WATT scale. I can't believe I never noticed that before.

willywonka

This is the reply I got from Pass Labs when I asked this question: ”The X260.8 does 34 watts peak in class A into 8 and will do about half that into 4”

Your amp will operate in class A up to 9 watts in 4 ohms

Interesting it does less class A into 4 ohms. I wonder if all amps do this or if they are all different. I'll have to contact the manufacturer of my amp and ask. Thanks for the reply. 

@swede58 I know Ohms law but it doesn't address all my questions. I am a retired electronic tech by trade. 

So, my Cayin A88T, (8 ohms: 22 wpc triode/45wpc ultra-linear), using the 16 ohm taps yields ____? Class A amps.

https://6moons.com/audioreviews/cayin/a88t.html

btw: Only model 1 has 16 ohm taps, later versions are still the same 8 ohm rating, only 4 or 8 taps provided.

thanks for any enlightenment

Elliott