If an amp is rated at 100WPC "RMS" or "Average Power" into 8 ohms at 0.1% THD, then Peak Power is 200WPC into 8 ohms at 0.1% THD.
But we don't know what the Clipping THD% is.
Clipping THD% could be 1%, 2%, 3%, etc.
Right?
But there are exceptions. I think the Benchmark amp example shows that Peak Power = Clipping Power = Average Power because regardless of THD%, the output line is almost a vertical line. I think.
Seem like you missed my post#32, in which I referred to you very point and I stated:
Regarding ADTG's, it could simply be a matter of interpretation. Under the following assumptions, ADTG would be correct.
1. Define clipping as when THD exceeds a defined % level, example: 0.1%.
2. By RMS power, he meant average power the amp is rated for at the defined THD % level mentioned in 1.
3. By 2X RMS power, he meant the peak power that is 2 X the so called continuous RMS power.
If by 2X RMS power he meant whatever the amp is rated in RMS/average power output at the defined THD level considered, clipping wouldn't occur until the RMS/average output exceeded 2X the rated output, then I would disagree with him too.
If you want to reference a % THD as "clipping" that is significant enough to worry about it, then you have to define (arbitrarily unfortunately..) what that % is. To me, 0.1% seems reasonably because when "clipping" is so slight, it is unlikely the resulting THD is going to be offensive, even it is predominantly high order odd harmonics.
So if you are okay with this assumption then let's look at the following example:
You can see that the AVR-X3300W, based on defining clipping as >=0.1% THD, delivered 165 W into 4 ohms, 2 channel driven, using the 1 kHz sweep, or 154 W full bandwidth sweep.
I have to use the 4 ohm graph because Gene did not include the 8 ohm graph.
Since the measured output were "average", i.e. the so called rms, the amp therefore clipped at 2X165 W = 330 W peak. Note that if you define clipping as >= 0.08% THD, the measured output would drop only slightly.
I hope you can see why I said it depends on how we interpret your reference of 2XRMS.
It would be less confusing if you rephrase your point by comparing average/rms to average/rms, or peak to peak. In that case, the DUT is rated 105 W into 8 ohms full bandwidth, and was measured on Gene's bench exactly 105 W, 2 channel driven, at 0.1%, so clipping actually occur at it's rated output, not 2X. You can see it clipped at 2X105, or 210 W, but then the amp was rated 210 W peak to begin with, so still not 2X, just 1X.
As ski said in post#43: "Strictly speaking, clipping is whenever there is any waveform deformation of the peaks.."
If we stick to that factual statement, then your question would become moot.