... 6.3 - 0 - 6.3
... If you want 6.3 volts you'd connect the 0 (CT) to one side and the other two together to the other end and get 6.3 V. ...
You just use center-tap to one end (from 0 to 6.3v), and not use the other end.
And are Volt Amps a wattage rating? volts X amps = watts right?
No, but yes.
Volt-AmpereWatt is "Real Power" and sometimes implies direct current where volts & amperes are same-phase.
Volt-Ampere Reactive is the part of AC power stored in the reactances of a transmission system, where volts and amperes are not in-phase. Also called "Reactive Power".
Using vector algebra, real power is on the X-axis, reactive power is on the Y-axis, and the vector sum of the two is "Apparent Power", has a magnitude (greater than either real or reactive power on their own) & also a direction (or phase angle).
Volt-Ampere is Volts RMS times Amperes RMS, and is also called "Apparent Power". We might mentally cheat and treat VA same-as Watts, but they are not because of volts & amperes being out of phase.
Power Factor is (in simple terms) a measure of how far out-of-phase voltage and current are, as it is the ratio of real power to apparent power. In a d.c. circuit, there is no phase difference between volts & amps, so apparent power is the same magnitude & direction as real power, and the circuit has a power factor of 1.