Can anybody answer this for me - why do so any companies manufacture speakers of 4 ohm impedance anyway? Is it a consequence of trying to induce certain sonic characteristics from the drivers? Is it easier to make better sounding drivers of lower impedance? Are 8 ohm speakers made in order to attract buyers who don't want to invest in high-powered amps?
Speaker impedance specifications mean nothing! Speaker impedance curves are usually complex. However, narrow fronted speakers are going to drop their impedance below 400 Hz for diffraction compensation. For a common 2,5 way speaker, (two woofers one tweeter on top), two thirds of the power will go to the woofers where the impedance will be 4 ohms or less, except at the narrow tuning peaks. If a speaker has two or more woofers it is four ohms, no matter what the manufacturer says. Not only that, voltage and current are always out of phase to some degree, so the current draw will be higher than you would think.
Now transistors amps are limited in the rail voltage because of the breakdown characteristics of semiconductors. So to get power, impedance has to be 8 ohms or less. So an amp really has to be able to drive a four ohm load, or you will not get the power you think. Because of THX certification, receivers do not generally blow up with a four ohm load, but they can't increase current. So most receivers driving the vast majority of speakers on the market, are actually delivering half their rated power. The reason you don't see this as obvious, is because it is only a 3 db reduction in spl.
So if you have two amps of 100 watt power into an 8 ohm load, and one can not increase current as load impedance drops, and the other can. Then then the first amp will be a 50 watt amp driving most speakers, and the other will be a 200 watt amp. That is a significant increase in spl.