I want a clear clean amp with a wide frequency range, ...
You
may want a large OT. "Large" means something different at 5w output than at 100w output.
As you attempt to transfer more power from primary to secondary through a transformer, more energy is magnetizing the core. As B-H curves show (top-right two pictures
here), more lines of flux are created until you hit the knee of the B-H curve. If it reminds you of the knee of a compressor curve (or how a pentode's plate current doesn't increase much as plate voltages rises higher than the "knee" of the curve), that's no accident.
Normal operation would be below the knee of the B-H curve. Above the knee, you're applying lots more power to the primary, but getting little change of power at the secondary. That's compression. Probably also distortion. And all generated in the OT.
So bigger power through-put requires a bigger core to handle the magnetizing force.
Low frequencies require greater magnetizing force than high frequencies. Not sure you've seen them, but ships & aircraft have a.c. power at 400Hz rather than 60Hz. The reason is the transformer cores are much smaller for the same power through-put at the higher frequency (saves weight/space, which matters a lot on a plane or ship).
So the lower you need full power, the bigger your OT core must be. Hammond offers hi-fi transformers which will manage their full power rating down to 30Hz. These will be bigger/heavier than Hammond's "guitar replacement OT's" that don't need full power down so low (meaning also "restricted bandwidth"). It's hard to directly compare core sizes among manufacturers (weight would be easiest, but we also often have to guesstimate core area as mounting holes & coil size are given in lieu of all 3 dimensions of the core stack), but you can get a feel for which are bigger/smaller for the same claimed power.
The smaller OT core won't do "as low, as loud, for the same distortion". You might even notice 50's tweed-style OTs tend to have smaller cores even for the same claimed tubes/output power as a "60's style" OT.
But what you like best is often very much about your preferences and trial & error.