Eldartford, the impedance relationship between the output stage and the autoformer on McIntosh solid-state amps has changed somewhat over the decades . . . and it directly parallels the changes in what good power semiconductors have been available.
Early SS amps like the MC 2105, 2300, etc. presented a low-impedance load (like 2-3 ohms) to the output stage, which was a quasi-complementary (all NPN) design. This is likely to be because transistors at the time were limited in their voltage capability, and good complementary pairs (NPN and PNP) weren't available. Virtually all other high-powered SS amps at the time used bootstraped pairs of output transistors (in series) to divide the voltage between them, allowing them to use high enough power-supply rails to get the output power but keeping the output transistors within their limits. At this time, Mac used no feedback around the transformer.
This remained relatively unchanged through the 1970s, even as complementary (NPN/PNP) EF output stages were adopted. In the early 1980s with amps like the MC2250, they added a little bit of feedback around the autoformer, but the output stage was still loaded at a low impedance. The 2250 was big step and the schematic is great to study . . . classic implementations of a diff-amp current mirror, active current-source for the tail and for the VAS, etc.
This arrangement stayed the same until the early 1990s, with amps like the MC7300, at which point the design was changed to where the autoformer presents a higher-impedance load to the amp, like 6-7 ohms. This makes sense as the output devices they used (MJ15003/4 and MJ15024/5) were now capable of handling both the voltage and current required for loading at a higher impedance.
The MC1000 in the late 1990s shared this approach, but was basically two amplifiers bridged around a single autoformer, which allowed the output power to grow without needing higher voltage capability in the output stage. The MC1000 was a commercial success, and now this bridged arrangement is common to all their amps that use autoformers.
As far as their linearity goes . . . I've looked at the distortion residuals of a ton of McIntosh amps, and with the earlier amps, it's dominated by output-stage (crossover) distortion. In modern SS Macs, the actual THD is completely buried in the noise floor, unless you really torture the thing.
I'm not saying that McIntosh solid-state amps are perfect, but they are damn good . . . and it takes very little time with any of them on the test bench to figure out that the linearity of the autoformer itself is simply not an issue.