How does OTL amp get its power?


I am contemplating a stereo tube amp of relative low power(for me, anyway) and an Atmasphere 60 watter caught my eye. It will be used in the output#2 of my pre. I am currently using MC501's and a MC2300 pre to drive JM Lab Alto Utopias. I understand the transformer and the Autoformer, but how and why does an OTL amp get its power and what is an advantage to using one vs. non OTL?
Do they get hot? How easily do they clip? What is its "reserve" power? All comments are greatly appreciated.

Pepe
cajunpepe
I actually tried to speak very generically about some of some of the challenges associated with designing a successful OTL amplifier . . . which seemed to be somewhat relevant to the original poster's question. I was NOT referring to disadvantages with Atma-Sphere in particular. NONE of these are necessarily of any particular disadvantage to the end user of a competently-designed amplifier, but they ARE obstacles for the circuit designer.

I personally have a little experience with the Futtermans, and am reasonably familiar with the topology-usually-refered-to-as-"Circlotron" (which isn't necessarily/originally an OTL) . . . and these circuits REALLY aren't all that different from each other -- they're all variations on "push-pull". An excellent analogy would be the QSC solid-state amp vs. the conventional topology - it's disorienting to look at the schematic, but all of the same elements are still there, doing the same things. I share Ralph's view of the "Circlotron" as being the more elegant arrangement, mainly because of the equal-amplitude drive voltages. And I'd speculate that we might agree that the capacitor-coupled "totem-pole" arrangement as being the most problematic.

Engineering is very much an "in-spite-of"/"because-of" kind of discipline . . . and IMO it's the ability to keep this in balance that defines whether or not a design is ultimately successful. Atma-Sphere's longevity as a company is a strong testment to their product being hugely, vastly improved over the NYAL (Futterman) amplifier, and they get good reviews for sound quality in-spite-of/because-of (choose one) the fact that it's OTL, tube, low-feedback, class-a, high-output-impedance, etc. etc. etc.
OTL get's it's power from the total  plate dissipation of the paralleled power tubes. 
Atmasphere,
I have built an OTL that uses any of the 7AC,,KT66 / 6L6 / E235l / 8417 / KT88 base tubes and even 6A3 / 6B4G / VV52B / 825 / 801.& 811.I think there is no limit on whatTUBE to use in an OTL amp..