There is another factor that may be at work here... namely the amplitude of the output signal.
Say your signal is line level. Typically 1 VAC.
And say your power supply is 5V.
When you send it through a class A, you want a healthy output signal. You want it to swing a few volts peak-to-peak. That way you'll have a healthy signal to drive your Ipod.
So you fiddle with the bias current, and you fiddle with the collector resistance. These are the chief adjustments in a class A amplifier. (We could include an emitter resistor, but we know that will automatically reduce amplitude.)
I'm checking with a simulation. I find I get an optimum result by using a collector resistor of 17 ohms. While I adjust that, I have been adjusting bias to keep the output centered vertically.
After doing this I find the transistor is conducting 300 mA at peaks. So it has a right to heat up (although this does not necessarily destroy it). I am operating it an an impedance of 17 ohms average.
The output impedance is not directly a part of the operation. I attach a 100 ohm load in series with a 33 uF blocking capacitor. However very little current goes through them, about 1/10 of what's going through the transistor.
Getting suitable voltage swing on the output is the important factor, as far as what we make our output impedance.
Notice that the output swing is great enough to hit flat spots at the peaks. This is distortion. A greater supply voltage would permit greater output swing.