Hello all - first post here (I have finally come to terms with my amplifier addiction and decided I can commit myself to yet another guitar electronics forum.)
Anyway, here's what I'm wondering:
Almost every old fender head I have looked at (maybe some new ones too, I don't recall) have 2 parallel jacks for speakers. One "Speaker" and one "Ext. Speaker". The thing I don't get is why the "Speaker" jack uses a shorting jack which grounds out the OT when nothing is plugged in. Obviously, the problem is if you're not paying attention you could accidentally plug the speaker into the "Ext" jack which would leave the speaker jack closed and the OT unloaded. Which would be really bad, right?
So why are the jacks wired this way?
Anyway, here's what I'm wondering:
Almost every old fender head I have looked at (maybe some new ones too, I don't recall) have 2 parallel jacks for speakers. One "Speaker" and one "Ext. Speaker". The thing I don't get is why the "Speaker" jack uses a shorting jack which grounds out the OT when nothing is plugged in. Obviously, the problem is if you're not paying attention you could accidentally plug the speaker into the "Ext" jack which would leave the speaker jack closed and the OT unloaded. Which would be really bad, right?
So why are the jacks wired this way?
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