Of course there are practical limits to a BTL implementation. But this discussion was about theory, in the context of the reviewer's statement that "with a BTL or bridge tied load, you double the voltage differential because the amplifier is run in differential mode. This doubles the power as each half of the amplifier is also now seeing half the impedance." If the statement was something like "this doubles the power
supplied by each half of the amplifier (i.e. quadruples the power of the entire amplifier) as each half of the amplifier is also now seeing half the impedance" that would be acceptable, provided a further explanation of the "virtual ground" in the center of the shared load, similar to the one Bruno offered. But, as written, the statement suggested the overall BTL power only doubles (also consistently with practical observations), which is simply not true absent limitations, e.g. for relatively small output levels.
> since we have two voltage sources in series, isn’t this the same as saying each sees half the load?
In a BTL, you do not have two voltage sources in series, you have them at the opposite sides of the shared load. Two voltage sources in series would imply they are directly connected to each other. In that scenario, if one source produced voltage V1 and the other voltage V2, together they would produce voltage V1+V2 and each would see the full (not half of) load because a voltage source has, by definition, zero impedance.
Alright, enough of this already, we beat this horse to death.
Now, since we have
@gene 's attention, where is the follow-up to the
Yamaha RX-A6A bench test you did last December?
"I will be conducting critical listening tests in the
formal review process coming next." Can't find one.