Re: Wattage how does design in power section decide this?
Since you know that there's Class A and Class B, and Class A /B, you know there's quite a different range of output depending on class and other paremeters in the circut. In a Class A circut, the tube handles the entire wave form. In Class B it only handles 1/2 of the wave, and another tube handles the other 1/2. Class A/B is like class B, but with a little overlap. The range of output can be radically different, for the same exact tube, such as a 6L6, for example:
Class A triode connection (300 plate voltage)-1.8 watts
Class A two tubes pentode connection (360 plate vltage) 18 watts
Class AB1, two tubes, pentode connection ( 360 plate voltage) 25 watts
Class AB1, two tubes, triode connection (360 plate voltage) 12 watts
Class AB1, two tubes, Pentode connection (450 plate voltage) 48 watts
Another factor is the headroom provided by the power supply. A tube amp is rated at clipping, or when the amp first barely beginns to distort, not it's max output. With low head room, this might occur at 30 watts, but on a higher head room design this might occur at 50 watts, for two amps with the same tubes and actually the same potential max output of say 90 watts.
The output at clipping in the same circut may be different for different tubes. For example, the JMP era Marshall 100's, with four EL34's, typically reached clipping at about 105 watts, but reached max output with distortion at 180 watts. The same amp with 6550's would reach clipping at a much higher output, but the overall max output of the amp with distortion would still be about 180 watts.