You pose a very interesting question, and I suspect the answer for your particular situation will only be revealed through listening. Manufacturers of 3-channel amps that have a shared power supply (one transformer and set of filter caps for all 3 channels) often recommend using the amp to drive the main speakers and center channel. The theory here, as you state, is that the channels needing the power can use it as necessary -- and since the center channel does not (as a rule) need the same power as the main speakers, that makes sense.
From personal experience with my son's HT system, where he uses an Adcom 5503 for the main speakers and center channel, it seems to work fine. To drive the rear surrounds, my son uses an older Adcom 545 amp (100 wpc).
In my own HT / audio system, I currently use a 2-channel Bryston 4B-ST amp for the main, full-range front speakers, and a 3-channel Bryston 5B-ST to drive the center channel and surrounds (all smaller speakers). The 5B-ST differs from your 8008x3 because each of the 3 channels have their own transformers and filter caps.
I think the real issue here is how to make best use of the power available, which depends on your speaker configuration. Do you have 5 full-range speakers, or are the main speakers full-range in combination with smaller, limited frequency center and surround speakers?.
If you have the latter configuration, and your center speaker is reasonably efficient (say, 87-88 db or higher), then your 8008x3 should work fine for the center and surround speakers. This will ensure that the full-range main speakers have the entire power supply of the 8008 (2-channel) available to them.
From personal experience with my son's HT system, where he uses an Adcom 5503 for the main speakers and center channel, it seems to work fine. To drive the rear surrounds, my son uses an older Adcom 545 amp (100 wpc).
In my own HT / audio system, I currently use a 2-channel Bryston 4B-ST amp for the main, full-range front speakers, and a 3-channel Bryston 5B-ST to drive the center channel and surrounds (all smaller speakers). The 5B-ST differs from your 8008x3 because each of the 3 channels have their own transformers and filter caps.
I think the real issue here is how to make best use of the power available, which depends on your speaker configuration. Do you have 5 full-range speakers, or are the main speakers full-range in combination with smaller, limited frequency center and surround speakers?.
If you have the latter configuration, and your center speaker is reasonably efficient (say, 87-88 db or higher), then your 8008x3 should work fine for the center and surround speakers. This will ensure that the full-range main speakers have the entire power supply of the 8008 (2-channel) available to them.