Re: About pulling power tubes to lower power...
In Class A the powerrrr tube(s) amplify the both sides of the signal, both the crest and the trough of the wave. In Class B one tube (or pair) amplifies the crest, or top half of the wave, and the other tube (or pair) amplifies the bottom half or trough of the wave. This is much more efficient from a power production perspective, but sounds more harsh, with a distortion occurring at the "cross over point" between the top and bottom 1/2 of the wave. In Class A/B each tube (or pair) amplifies a small portion of the other half of the wave. This creates a smoother more class A type tone. On a fixed bias amp, the hotter the bias is set the more each tube shares a portion of the other 1/2 of the signal wave. The colder the bias is set the less so, or more pure class B. IIRC, Class A/B I is less Class A, and more Class B, than Class A/BII when properly biased. Cathode Bias usually allows closer to class A operation by a Class A/B amp than fixed bias. Most Fender and all Marshall tube models are Class A/BII