Oh you and I have been there before too. And I've been ribbed about my particulars here on occasion. Your're skin seems to have grown sufficiently hide like.
Ok,.. There's nothing about a red plating tube or tubes that should harm speakers. 3.5 DCR seems right to me for a pair pf 8 ohm speakers in parallel, which should be what you have. C12N's might be ok in that amp. I'm not familiar with them. I know it's a repro speaker but not how repro. Since they're rated a tad under the amps claimed wattage they might get stressed if you cranked a continuous tone through the amp at full volume. Which would probably kill you anyway. Otherwise they get a lot of breaks with a typical playing situation and should dissipate heat sufficiently to survive. If they sound "rough" it could well be that they they just aren't broken in yet. Even if they came with the amp, which was dead, they may not have had much time on them or been played hard at all.
If by "rough" or "odd noises" you mean things like a distinct buzzing sound (that you know isn't the amp) or a sympathetic tone on certain notes (that you know isn't the amp) then you may have reason to suspect a bad speaker. As I mentioned, speakers will not make noises on their own. As in, the amp is sitting there after everything is warmed up and the speakers are making noises. Won't happen. That would be the amp making noises and the speakers telling you about it. Rattles and buzzes that are relative to volume can also be from the cabinet (or even the room!). Loose or ill fitted parts (or loose change on a table, etc.). This can be real PITA to track down too. All too common in old combo's. Remember that there's over a hundred watts and two 12" speakers shaking things up.
Ok,.. There's nothing about a red plating tube or tubes that should harm speakers. 3.5 DCR seems right to me for a pair pf 8 ohm speakers in parallel, which should be what you have. C12N's might be ok in that amp. I'm not familiar with them. I know it's a repro speaker but not how repro. Since they're rated a tad under the amps claimed wattage they might get stressed if you cranked a continuous tone through the amp at full volume. Which would probably kill you anyway. Otherwise they get a lot of breaks with a typical playing situation and should dissipate heat sufficiently to survive. If they sound "rough" it could well be that they they just aren't broken in yet. Even if they came with the amp, which was dead, they may not have had much time on them or been played hard at all.
If by "rough" or "odd noises" you mean things like a distinct buzzing sound (that you know isn't the amp) or a sympathetic tone on certain notes (that you know isn't the amp) then you may have reason to suspect a bad speaker. As I mentioned, speakers will not make noises on their own. As in, the amp is sitting there after everything is warmed up and the speakers are making noises. Won't happen. That would be the amp making noises and the speakers telling you about it. Rattles and buzzes that are relative to volume can also be from the cabinet (or even the room!). Loose or ill fitted parts (or loose change on a table, etc.). This can be real PITA to track down too. All too common in old combo's. Remember that there's over a hundred watts and two 12" speakers shaking things up.
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