If the comparison is HPF vs HPF, then indeed the RS has usually higher losses. But the size and weight might play significant role, isn't the RS significantly heavier then the preheat?
The main dissipation source is the winding resistivity. If you for some inductive component choose larger core, as it has larger cross-section, you need less turns for the same section, so used wire would be shorter. And as less turns have to fit, the wire might be thicker. And the winding window on larger core is usually larger, so even thicker wire might be used. So you decreased the resistivity, so it's associated losses three fold.
The second dominant loss source are core losses, what are proportional to square of peak magnetic flux. So when you increase the core size and keep number of turns, the field might be lower, lowering associated core losses.
But both contributors have to be balanced: Too much turns mean too much resistive losses, while too few too much core losses (if not saturation problems), so trade-off optimization is needed.
So when you might use larger, heavier, so more costly design, the resulted losses would be lower (assume the optimization was done well), yielding lower operating temperature, so higher reliability and longer life.
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