I'm not exactly sure what determined whether an amp left the factory wired 16 & 8 or 8 & 4, but I suspect it was determined by the cabinet(s) configuration rather than the year. Possibly the availability of drivers had some influence; the D140/130 JBL's were available in 8 or 16 ohm, and using the more common 8 ohm JBL's you can't get an 8 ohm cab. To run a pair of 2 driver cabs loaded with 8 ohm drivers correctly, in the absence of a 2 ohm tap you would need to wire the cabs themselves in series and use the 16 & 8 ohm taps for the parallel output jacks.
Regardless, it's an easy switch if a particular amp isn't wired for your particular application.
Django7866, I personally wouldn't even put different 6550's in an amp without re-biasing, but you are correct about the interchangeability between 6550's and KT88's. The 6550 is the American version of the British KT88, and either will work dandy in the Sunn circuit. Up until 1969, Sunn used imported KT88's and then switched all of the amps to domestic 6550's. The amps themselves stayed the same; 6550's or KT88's is really just a matter of personal preference.