Re: Magical World of Ohms
Eric and KG, I stand by my answer. With tube amps, it's better for the load to lower than higher. (Although either of the examples given, 4- or 16-ohm speaker on an 8-ohm output is unlikely to cause problems.)
Don't believe me? Try this experiment: run one vintage Marshall with its output shorted. Run a second amp with the infuriatingly unreliable impedance-selector thingie removed, effectively opening the OT secondary. Blast "Smoke on the Water" through both amps. What happens? For the shorted output, chances are not much. For the open secondary, there will likely be smoke & flames coming from the OT and other components in the output stage.
There are many quality tube amps out there that actually have a shorting jack for the speaker outputs, because a short is better for the amp than running it open-circuited if you forget to plug in the speaker cable:
the blackface Super Reverb for example, or
the Ampeg V4, or even the
Dumble Overdrive Special. Of course this won't help if you plug the cable into the amp, but not into the cabinet.
Solid-state amps are exactly the opposite - they will run all day into an open circuit, but don't like impedances lower than rated, down to and including short circuits. Quality hi-fi and pro audio amps have protective circuits to shut the amp down in these overload cases, so a short won't kill them, but the amp won't work into the low impedance, either.
To answer the original question, there are some tonal differences both from mismatched impedances and from differing matched impedances in otherwise identical amp/speaker combinations (think Bandmaster vs. Super Reverb). Gerald Weber did a good job covering this in his latest book.