What is striking to me, is that for uhm...about 20% ? power difference, the 18watter seems more than 20% increase iron ... Or has anyone found it to be underated at 18watts? or is the blues junior 15watt rating a bit of spec-stretching on the part of Fender ? lol.
Mark Baier (of Victoria Amps)
pointed out some time ago that Fender solved an issue with under-power-capable speakers in their tweed amps by using smaller-cored OT's.
Bass requires the most power & most speaker cone excursion. It also requires big OT cores to pass all the power of the bass notes to the speaker. And an OT rated to pass full power down to 20Hz has a much bigger, heavier core than an OT rated for the same power but only down to 100Hz.
But what happens if you attempt to push full (mid-band) rated power through that 100Hz OT, but down at 20 or 40Hz? The OT core isn't big enough to sustain all the flux necessary, and it saturates rather than pass all the power applied to the primary. Compared to the signal on the primary, the secondary's output to the speaker is compressed and actually has higher harmonics not unlike tube distortion.
Now think about Marshall amp evolution... Marshall amps were right there with Rock all the way. And as the style of the day moved to heavier distortion, Marshall preamp trimmed more bass. Distorted bass fundamentals generate midrange harmonics that beat against the midrange fundamental notes being played. Rolling off the bottom octave of the guitar clears up the distorted sound, but your ear doesn't miss the fundamentals much because the harmonics of the note are still there.
This is also the basis of a Treble Booster pedal (though that also assumes a distorted amp is being pushed by the Treble Booster to prevent the sound from being harsh). See a demonstration at ~8:54 of the video below.
Other than the tweed Twin and Bassman (actually intended for bass players when produced), original Fender OT's up to the early 60's look mighty puny.
In the blackface amps, Fender had the Concert, Bassman, Bandmaster, Vibrolux, Tremolux, Pro and Super, all with 2x6L6 output stages. What is the difference between them (other than speakers)? The OT's are different sizes... IIRC, the Bassman and Super Reverb had the biggest OT's, while the Bandmaster, Tremolux, Vibrolux and Pro Reverb all shared the same smaller OT. I know my Pro Reverb isn't as loud at the same setting as the Super Reverb I used to own, and that is probably because the OT core is smaller than the Super Reverb's OT. It's not all the speakers (though that plays a role as well).
KISS, because it's not all Guru Smoke...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wzs2g1nz4JQ?t=8m54s