Many SET 'designers' simply buy the parts (including the OPT) and assemble the amp from a circuit they found. The transformer is the tricky bit since the size of the core vs the gap to prevent DC saturation is key to getting bass performance. The larger the transformer, the more critical the winding quality must be to prevent distributed capacitance from limiting high frequency response. They are much harder to build than output transformers for PP tube amps as a result, and usually lack the bandwidth at both extremes compared to PP transformers of the same power rating.There are 5 parts to a set amplifier:
1. The chassis and overall layout of parts and components.
2. The design of the audio circuit.
3. The design of the power supply.
4. The design and selection of the passive components.
5. The design and construction of all of the transformers.
They are all interrelated and no one part is more important than the others. The output transformer should not present a challenge to any competent transformer designer/manufacturer. The general problem with SET amplifiers is that it takes money to make a good SET amplifier and many manufacturers cut corners and don't address one or more of the 5 parts above. A really good SET designer/manufacturer will have addressed all of these parts very carefully.
Emphasis added: these statements are false. The latter first: Feedback does not destroy the 'SE sound' if applied properly. It can do it quite readily if improperly applied, which is to say its the designer's fault and not that of feedback if one feels the highlighted statement above to be true.The issue with driving a speaker like the DeVore, or any speaker using a large driver (10" and above) is the SET amplifier has to over come the large back EMF produced from the large driver. The bass performance as the volume increases becomes intolerable as the amp simply cannot control the cone. To drive these with a SET you need at least a 211 driving the cone, or you use a little bit of feedback to lower the amplifiers output impedance. I have measured the Airtight 300B and it only delivers about 4 watts max. It drives the speaker better if you switch in some feedback via the feedback switch, but then you lose all the SE sound quality.
The former: There's no problem of an amp of high output impedance controlling the cone of the DeVore 10" drivers or for that matter a 15" driver, if the speaker (as in the case of the DeVore) is designed for such amps. More on this topic.
Clearly it is the problem of some SETs whose load lines have become elliptical at the frequencies (bass) that the cone delivers. That is a weakness of SETs (previously explained) and clearly some are better at this than others.
It should be pointed out that no SET can deliver full power at 20Hz (due to a lack of inductance in the OPT; so we see right here that no matter the components, layout, power supply or design of the circuit, that the OPT is paramount). They may well have low power response that low with no problem. But as everyone knows bass frequencies are where most of the power in audio occurs.