With regard to minimum load impedance - you should ask the manufacturer what their recommendation is and honor that. Depending on how they designed their amplifier and cooling, it may be 2 ohms or 4 ohms. I doubt that you'll see anybody recommend a load less than 2 ohms. Too much current flow and you'll let the magic smoke out, but all three of your wishes will be that your amp work again.
This is actually a very important consideration for people who run a stereo amp in bridge mode. When you configure for bridge mode, you're setting one amplifier up to handle the positive side of your signal and the other to handle the negative side (a gross oversimplication, but effectively true). This will give you a mono amp with greater output power, but the minimum acceptable output impedance is now twice what it was for each of the original stereo amps. So, if you had a stereo power amp that had a minimum load impedance of 2 ohms you'd be fine with a 4 ohm cabinet connected to each channel and can run full bore all day until the police come over and tell you to turn down. If you switch that same amp to bridge mode and connected up just one cabinet, you'd be running at the minimum load and possibly in danger of overheating. If you were in bridge mode and connected up both cabinets in parallel, the sum load impedance will be 2 ohms and you'll may be looking at cooked output transistors before long.
David Fung