That other company uses Autoformers in their amps. I am not an EE so I can't explain what they are but they effectively raise the load that the amp sees. There are 3 sets of speaker taps for 2, 4 and 8 ohms and they provide the same watt maximum for each tap. As far as I know there are not any other manufacturers using autoformers because of cost/mass/volume. It seems that the other manufacturers believe that those budgets can be better used in other ways to provide better sound. The same for those blue meters -- Many think they look great but they are not useful. For example, on a 200 watt amp the first half of the scale gets you to 2 watts and 20 watts is at ~ 3/4 of the scale. The needle flies around but doesn't tell you anything. More cost without contribution to sound.
I suppose I am sounding like I am bashing that company and I do not mean to do that -- they have a different philosophy, they are successful and they sell to a particular customer type IMO.
I used their equipment for about 10 years and it sounds good. I currently have one of their late model integrated amps with autoformers and blue meters that is sitting cold on a shelf since I replaced it with a BP26 and 7BSST2. 
Tony
Auto-transformer is a transformer in which the primary and secondary wind are connected, sometimes there is only one winded.
Transformers are a necessary evil in tube amps, but transistor amps with an output transformer are an absolete design, a waste of money, as it is an expensive part.
Hope you like this sound.
Gustavo
> Never go to a psychiatrist, adopt a cat or dog from the street. On the streets pets live only two years average.