Burgermeester wrote on 06/02/22 at 02:47:04:Thought-provoking. I didn't know that tube power output was invariant with respect to impedance.
He was generalizing to make his point.
Tube amps have a maximum power at a certain impedance (based on the OPTs) and typically have less power at higher and lower impedance. Some times the difference is fairly significant and other times it is not much.
Speakers "rated" at 8 ohms (or 6, or 4, etc) can be 5 ohms at certain frequencies and they can be 30 ohms or more at other frequencies.
Check out Stereophile measurements of speaker impedance and tube amplifier power into different impedances.
An example of a single ended EL84 tube amp that I used to own that was switchable between pentode and triode, but only had one winding tap for the speakers.
Pentode 6 watts - 8 ohms; 3.5 watts - 4 ohms
Triode 1.8 watts - 8 ohms; 1.7 watts - 4 ohms
Amplifiers that have multiple output winding taps will come closer to the same wattage at the tap impedance, but remember 99% of speakers do not present a flat impedance to the amplifier, so the actual wattage will still vary.
That is why Decware and many tube enthusiasts will tell people to try all of the speaker taps regardless of what the speaker impedance "rating" is, the "wrong" one may actually work better and therefore sound better.