The answer is 'it depends'. I test my completed WOPL into an eight ohm passive load, with a 1.4 VRMS 2KHz sine wave connected to the input jack, one channel at a time to determine the balance between each channel. If I connected both channels into dummy loads, that would be a worst case scenario for the power supply. I do that, too. If I hooked the outputs to the four ohm passive dummy load, the power output would go way up, but that doesn't tell me much diagnostically. I look at the output signals on the oscilloscope to check for clipping threshold, usually none. Then I test first one, then both channels musically. Each amp is different, mostly depending on the available voltage provided by the power supply. I have seen PL400's with anywhere between +/- 72VDC to +/- 85VDC. And the PL700 can range from +/- 98VDC to +/- 110VDC.
The last two PL700 amps I did measured well over 1000 Watts peak musical power, which is what you are listening to from your speakers. Depending on the efficiency of your personal eight ohm speakers, you may 'hear' between 500 Watts to 800 Watts. This is stadium level sound, you cannot be in a listening room at those levels, your hearing will be in peril at that sound pressure level.