Again, no one said it would do it continuously, I would say not even for 1 second. For a split second though, say, 20 ms as Yamaha appeared to base their dynamic output on, it is quite conceivable for an amp rated 200WX5 (cont.) to send 31A into a 1 ohm load without tripping any breakers,
http://faq.yamaha.com/us/en/article/audio-visual/av-receivers-amps/997/2439/what-s_the_difference_between_continuous_rms_and_dynamic_power_
Avtech tested the Parasound A21's dynamic output into 2 ohms (not 1 ohm), it passed with 1105.9W at <1% distortions and almost 1200W at <2%. Note that Parasound's website did not specify distortions level either, nor the duration of output at 45A peak.
http://www.milleraudioresearch.com/download2011/reports/nov11/parasound_halo_a21.html
The Bryston 4B SST (300WPC) was tested to 1 ohm, 2003.3W at 0.7% distortions.
http://www.milleraudioresearch.com/avtech/
If you browse through that avtech website, you will see that not every amp or avr had such high dynamic output on their bench, but a few of them did, even a few AVRs ( a couple of Yamaha's) can do 400-500W, in fact almost 600W.
I said it right from the beginning, and repeated at least once, that this thing is more marketing hype than practical facts because just by saying 45A without being stating the test conditions such as duration, distortion, waveform, rms vs peak etc. That does not take away the possibility that the unstated conditions could be something like, 10 ms, at 2%, or even 10% THD, using regulated power supply etc.etc., we can only guess..
I actually thought we were in agreement. You seemed to bull dog on the 1000W into 1 ohm thing, perhaps not considering the qualifying key factors such as duration, distortions, among others.