Last weekend I ended up with three well regarded amplifiers from yesteryear: a Bryston 3B Pro, a Carver TFM-55 and a Hafler XL280.
All amplifiers have recently been refurbished/recapped and the Hafler has some fairly extensive modifications as well (courtesy of AVNerdguy). He actually did the work on the Bryston as well.
I hooked the amps up to my big system: deHavilland UltraVerve 3 preamp, Magnepan 3.7s, interconnects courtesy of AVNerdguy, Kimber 8TC speaker cables and the source was a Harman Kardon CD player run into a Pacific Audio DAC. No subwoofer was used.
For the test material, I used Zappa's Apostrophe' as always because it's so well recorded and I know it note for note.
Normally I run VTL 300 deluxe monoblocks so that's my frame of reference.
Going in alphabetical order, the Bryston 3B

ran cool as a cucumber (as always), there was LOTS of detail, the upper registers were great, the midrange was so-so and the bass was anemic.
The CarverTFM-55

ran cool and sounded well balanced from top to bottom. Detail was very good and nothing really stood out as being weird - the bass wasn't over emphasized, the midrange was very good as was the treble.
The Hafler XL280

ran warm (as always), had good detail, great bass, decent midrange and highs but the whole presentation was overshadowed by the bass - the whole presentation was pulled down to the overly warm end of the scale.
Of the three, the Carver was the winner by a fair margin - aside from no real 3D soundstage (which was expected), it did everything right.
The Bryston would be killer if you were biamping and wanted to do the top end or, as I use it, for a center channel. You can adjust the level and it's clear as a bell.
The Hafler would be the ticket if your system/room was really bright or the way I use it: it drives wall mounted MMGs to counteract the brightness of the Bryston for the center channel.
If I had to pick just one it would be TFM-55, no contest.