What I said was my best guess since I can't read the text off the chips ... it was based on the chips being surface mount with small copper surface to radiate heat, and based on the chip package size. They could be 2-3 A linear regulators or something else.
If you want accurate answers, it would help to take a clear picture of the amplifier board or write down exactly what it says on the chips.
Those watt numbers could be unrelated to the actual power consumption and real audio watts. They could be PMPO watts or maximum watts if you allow up to 5-10% distortions, which is not something you'd desire from a music amplifier.
So for example, let's say the board using an amplifier chip that can produce up to 100w with 10% distortions with 2-3 ohm speakers and with 25-26v (the maximum voltage) and enough current. With 4 ohm or 8 ohm speakers the chip may output only 70-80w with up to 10% THD and with that high voltage.
But if you want less than 1% THD and that paired with slightly lower voltage would limit the output to around 40-50w.
So the chinese guys say on the text 100w because technically it is correct and makes the amplifier look better (a lot more performance for the money) but in real world, you would get at most half that with very good quality.
Here's an example of a stereo amplifier chip that can do 2 x 120w with 6 ohm speakers , TDA7498 TR :
https://www.digikey.com/product-detail/en/stmicroelectronics/TDA7498TR/497-11063-2-ND/2571064So you could make an amplifier board with this chip and say on the sales page 120w but open the datasheet and read :
http://www.st.com/content/ccc/resource/technical/document/datasheet/db/c5/04/74/fd/08/43/de/CD00244535.pdf/files/CD00244535.pdf/jcr:content/translations/en.CD00244535.pdfFeatures
• 100 W + 100 W output power at THD = 10% with RL = 6 ? and VCC = 36 V
• 80 W + 80 W output power at THD = 10% with RL = 8 ? and VCC = 34 V
• Wide - range single - supply operation (14 -39 V)
So you can see both maximum output powers are for THD of 10% which is too much for listening to music, you want less than 1% (actually less than 0.1%) if you want a quality music amplifier.
You can also see that just by going with more common 8 ohm speakers, the maximum output power of this amplifier chip drops to 80w + 80w
And... in order to achieve these the voltage needs to be very close to the maximum input voltage (34v)
But scroll down in the datasheet and you can see some nice graphs .. go down to page 12, and you have there Figure 6 which says THD versus output power (at 6 ohm) ... and you can see there that the THD is below 0.1% as long as the output power is below around 50 watts per channel ... anything higher and the distortions increase dramatically... so you don't want that.
Basically, your 100w+100w 6ohm amplifier chip that's 80w + 80w 8 ohm amplifier chip but which you only want to use at maximum 40-50w + 40-50w at 8 ohm if you want quality.
This particular chip claims to be about 90% efficient, so assuming you design this amplifier for a total of 100w (let's say 50w+50w at 8 ohm) , you'd need a power supply that can provide up to around 110-120 watts of power... at let's say 38v (1v below maximum input voltage), that's 120w / 38v = ~ 4A of current.
You'd use a 36v AC transformer (2x18v AC) , you'd rectify the AC voltage to DC using a bridge rectifier which gets you a peak voltage of 50v, and you'd use enough capacitance to get the minimum voltage above around 40v at 4a ( C = 4a / [2 x 60hz x (50v peak - 40v min) ] = 4 / 1200 = 0.0033333 Farads or 3333 uF minimum .. then use a linear regulator to stabilize this 40v .. 50v to 38v at 4A for the amplifier chip.
Or, you'd use a 30v AC transformer (2x15v AC), rectify it to get a peak voltage of around 41v, use about 12000-20000uF of capacitance and you have 36v..41v and then use a linear regulator to get ~ 35v output voltage.
Or you could just use a switching power supply with 24v DC output and just live with the fact that the amplifier board will only output around 35w per channel instead of 50w.
Sadly those amplifier boards you linked to don't mention the chip used and how it's configured (the gain and everything) and again, i can only guess what regulators that board uses... but if you figure that out you can look for datasheets and follow what i said above and determine what's realistically possible with those chips under the heatsinks.