@georgehifi
The MOSFETs in an F5 do nothing but swing current. They operate in common drain mode and provide no voltage gain whatsoever. There is no "almost" about them doubling current with a halving of the impedance. That's exactly what they'll do until they melt or the power supply taps out. Pass Labs claims their amps will drive any load down to a dead short, though the protection circuitry tends to kick in just below 2 ohm, but their designs are that rugged. I wouldn't try putting my F5 up to driving a dead short because it's meager single pair of outputs wouldn't handle that well at all, but something like a well built F5 Turbo V3? Yeah... That thing would definitely drive 1 ohm loads all day.
There are a number of modes you can operate a transistor in to get gain out of them. When you operate them in a mode where they amplify voltage and amperage you tend to get an amplifier that's more sensitive to a reactive load because fluctuations in the voltage also mean fluctuations in the current. Most, if not all of Pass Labs amps, operate the output stage as a source follower; all it does is provide current in support of a prior voltage gain stage.
No offence, but it doesn't sound like you have much actual working knowledge of how these devices work. I understand some people like the sound of BJT amps. There's nothing wrong with that. They're definitely different than FET amps just like tubes are different. You assertion that a FET can't swing current like a BJT can is demonstrably false though. Not only can they do it, they generally do it much better.