The speakers in the amp are 8 ohm. They're wired in parallel, for a total 4 ohm load. If you're pushing the amp into overdrive, you want a pair of 8 ohm speakers that can handle at least 120W to 150W each.
Fender decided to get clever with the output jacks on these later Twins; you can run them with a four ohm load, an eight ohm load, or two four ohm loads. If you can find a four ohm speaker cabinet you can run it along with the internal speakers. If you can find an eight ohm cabinet, you can run it instead of the internal speakers.
I bring this up again because, while it is more stuff to carry, there is a perverse rule of speaker pricing where a brand new speaker with no cabinet will cost $100 each, but you can frequently find used guitar or bass cabinets, with speakers, for $100 total. This might only apply in the lower 48, I'm not sure.
It really sounds like with your playing style, a closed-back cabinet would be a better fit though. Shopping for replacement speakers is less fun when you NEED them because the old ones blew up.
Fender decided to get clever with the output jacks on these later Twins; you can run them with a four ohm load, an eight ohm load, or two four ohm loads. If you can find a four ohm speaker cabinet you can run it along with the internal speakers. If you can find an eight ohm cabinet, you can run it instead of the internal speakers.
I bring this up again because, while it is more stuff to carry, there is a perverse rule of speaker pricing where a brand new speaker with no cabinet will cost $100 each, but you can frequently find used guitar or bass cabinets, with speakers, for $100 total. This might only apply in the lower 48, I'm not sure.
It really sounds like with your playing style, a closed-back cabinet would be a better fit though. Shopping for replacement speakers is less fun when you NEED them because the old ones blew up.
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