I looked back at the test results, which were based on a 1:200 on/off signal cycle and calculated that going up to a 1.25 on/off cycle would result in approximately 93% of the measured 1:200 outputs. Adjusting for this on both the 4B and 7B results, and comparing the adjusted peak power ratings into both 8 and 4 ohms to the corresponding published rated RMS power ratings, I get the following:
4B-SST2:
8 ohms (1:25) = 405 watts = headroom 1.3 db
4 ohms (1:25) = 786 watts = headroom 2 db
7B-SST2:
8 ohms (1:25) = 933 watts = headroom 1.9 db
4 ohms (1:25) = 1731 watts = headroom 2.8 db
So the ratings are still very respectable on the 4B, especially into 4 ohms but the 7B considerably more balsy in terms of dynamic headroom. Though these are only estimates, given I didn't have complete test figures on the amp for a 1:25 on/off signal, I believe they shed some light.
The conclusion is that if you want to get closer to real-life dynamic capabilities - the more powerful Bryston amps rule. Oh, yes, another conclusion is that using a 4 ohm nominal speaker, it seems that one of the clear benefits would be higher dynamics and therefore, greater dynamic realism potential.
Not sure if Mike will get to testing the other amps or comment on these results but I appreciate him sharing the info. Very enlightening.