Platypus said:
As far as the Class A and A/B thing, what most people call Class A is sort of a misnomer as *true* class A is single ended and not accomplished with a pair of tubes; rather a single power tube. But that's splitting hairs rather thin for most.
Well, not true. (Read Randall's paper on this topic, here is the link... http://www.mesaboogie.com/US/Smith/ClassA.htm) Class and configuration are different.
First is operating class of the tube. It's kind of hard to explain if you're not familiar with how a tube works, so this is a bit simplified. Class A means the tube is setup such that DC current is flowing all the time. Meaning that when your guitar volume is at zero, the power section is still burning a nominal amount of watts (you don't hear anything because there is no AC current present). Not very efficient. Class AB means the tube is setup such that when idling, there is very little current flowing, i.e. the power draw at idle is very low (though not zero, were it zero you'd have class B, which sucks for sound amplification). The upside of class AB is more efficiency.
Second is the configuration, which refers to how tubes are connected. "Single-ended", "push-pull", and "parallel" are what we usually talk about. In single-ended, the entire signal runs through a single path and is amplified by one tube at a time. In "push-pull" the signal is split in half with each half being amplified by different tubes. In both cases one can bolt on additional tubes in parallel. (Though in push-pull you have to bolt on additional pairs of tubes.)
So, contrary to the quote above, it is entirely possible to build a class A push pull power section. The LSS has one (and also the single-ended option). Though all Class AB designs are push-pull.
There are other things going on like biasing method, negative feedback loop or not, triode or pentode, etc.
Randall's paper does a good job on the details. Though it is a pretty technical article.