mscaggs is saying he uses a Deluxe Reverb OT for more power. A Princeton OT is 8kΩ while the Deluxe is 6kΩ or 6.6kΩ. With the same supply voltage, the lower OT impedance allows bigger plate current swings, times same plate voltage swings = increased output power from ~14-15w up to ~20-22w.
Looking at both BF schematics; same output tubes, same bias, same B+, but different driver/PI, grid resistors....... what other parameters change the equation to have a lower impedance (= more watts)?
"Parameter that changes to have lower impedance" = Output Transformer Winding Ratio (Primary to Secondary).
- There are fewer turns on the primary, same load attached to the seocndary, which yields a lower reflected primary impedance.
- B+ voltage is the same, as is tube type. The tube has a minimum B+ voltage which must exist from plate-to-cathode at peak plate current
- Same Voltage (say 380v net of the minimum plate-to-cathode voltage) times lower OT Primary Z = Higher Peak Current
- Higher Current * Same Voltage = Higher Power Output
Ignore tube type for a moment and consider Princeton Reverb vs. Deluxe Reverb vs. Super Reverb... All are
roughly the same B+. Princeton OT primary is 8kΩ, Deluxe OT primary is 6.6kΩ, Super Reverb OT primary is 4kΩ. Power outputs are typically stated as 15w for Princeton, 22w for Deluxe, 40w for Super. See the pattern?
At the end of the day, the PT, power supply and OT primary impedance dictate the maximum power you can push to a speaker. The you need a tube (or tubes) which can swing the current implied by the power supply voltage & OT impedance to allow the maximum power output to be achieved. And even if you have all those pieces, you can hamstring the output tubes to be unable to swing all the current they otherwise might, and have the output stage perform well below its full capability (power reduction schemes, anyone?).
You shouldn't, but probably could cobble together 80 12AU7's as an output section to deliver 30w to a speaker load... Unfortunately, there are a lot of bad shortcuts/"rules" popularized which hinder wider understanding of this stuff. The "rules" are often based on observations of "typical use" in different guitar amps but often give an incorrect rationale for why it's a "rule".