2Ohms would be a fun roll of the ol' dice haha. Realistically, I'm not sure if the OHM settings sound any better. I hope someone can correct me on this if I'm wrong, but my interpretation of it would be the lower the ohm rating the more power TO the cab, yes? So if you're running one head, with 2 cabs, each cab rated at 8ohms, you would want double the power (less resistance) from the amp, running the amp at 4ohms would distribute enough power to power both of those cabs. I don't really know the exact science behind it but I'm hoping someone can help out with this. Ed?
Only with transistor amps without an impedance matching output transformer. With tube amps, the best performance is when the speaker load
matches the impedance of the output stage, so they use transformers to match them up, which is why there are all those posts about impedance matching and output taps.
Transistor amps will generally deliver more power as the impedance lowers pretty much right up to the point they become unstable and melt down, which is why you find posts about whether an amp is "stable" @ 2 ohms, etc.
Tube amps deliver the same power regardless of load impedance because the tubes themselves are actually seeing the
same impedance, because that big piece of iron is
matching the output to the load.
In reality, there are transistor amps
with output matching transformers, and tube amps
without output matching transformers, but neither of those really have any bearing on discussion as far as the context of this forum, and likewise this whole post is really an overall generalization. Also, there is the fact that speaker impedance is "nominal", and therefore it's not an
exact impedance across its entire frequency spectrum, power range, etc.
But; I think it should cover the "lower ohms = more power" thing for the purposes of
this discussion.