I’m in agreement with Chuck & The Dude.
First let’s all remember that there are a lot of design rules that are bent or outright broken by tube type guitar amplifiers. There are also people who tweak their amps purposely to “out of spec”, “over spec” or "mismatched" conditions in order to achieve their desired tone.
Given those statements it appears that you are very happy with the sound of the amp and it is not eating output tubes or otherwise showing signs of stress. Given the situation, if you change the OT, then I think the probability is higher that you will be less satisfied with the tone than the probability that you will unlock some hidden tone.
If the goal was to drive a purely resistive load with maximum power then exact matching would be very important. However, the impedance of a real speaker load varies quite a bit across the frequency band generated by a guitar. Therefore, a 4 Ohm rated speaker load used in place of a 2 Ohm rated speaker load is no big deal for a Super Reverb type amp. Since you goal is to play a guitar amp that gives you the tone you like and you already have that I say to ditch the idea of changing the OT and enjoy the amp as is.
Cheers,
Tom
First let’s all remember that there are a lot of design rules that are bent or outright broken by tube type guitar amplifiers. There are also people who tweak their amps purposely to “out of spec”, “over spec” or "mismatched" conditions in order to achieve their desired tone.
Originally posted by old guy
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Originally posted by old guy
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Cheers,
Tom
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