Hey all,
I posted here a little while back about getting a more crisp, less muddy sound out of my Fender 140 head. I tried swapping tubes and removing some high frequency roll-off caps to not much avail. Then I tried using the head for bass. And it sounds amazing, like it was originally tuned for bass more so than guitar, and it's just as loud as the 700-watt solid-state monster I had been using.
So my issue is this: The bass cab I'm using is a 4-ohm 2x15. The amp has a "speaker" output and an "extension speaker" output, both of which are labelled at 8 ohms minimum load. I know how with tube amps, it's generally safer to use a speaker with a lower impedance than the amp is expecting than one with a higher impedance, so I feel comfortable hooking this 4-ohm cab to the 8-ohm output on the amp.
However, given the choice I'd obviously rather have all the impedances match, I'm just not sure how to do it. Since the speakers are each 8 ohms, wired in parallel to give 4, I suppose I could just connect each one to the head separately. Looking at the schematic, though, it looks like both OT secondary leads go to the "extension speaker" jack first, and plugging into that changes which tap is used. It makes sense in my head that you would plug one 8-ohm speaker into the "speaker" output and use only the 8-ohm tap, plug a second 8-ohm speaker into the "extension speaker" output and use only the 4-ohm tap for both, or plug one 4-ohm speaker into the "extension speaker" output and use only the 4-ohm tap. Is this how it works or am I missing something?
Schematic for those interested:
http://www.stratopastor.org.uk/strat...-140-schem.pdf
I posted here a little while back about getting a more crisp, less muddy sound out of my Fender 140 head. I tried swapping tubes and removing some high frequency roll-off caps to not much avail. Then I tried using the head for bass. And it sounds amazing, like it was originally tuned for bass more so than guitar, and it's just as loud as the 700-watt solid-state monster I had been using.
So my issue is this: The bass cab I'm using is a 4-ohm 2x15. The amp has a "speaker" output and an "extension speaker" output, both of which are labelled at 8 ohms minimum load. I know how with tube amps, it's generally safer to use a speaker with a lower impedance than the amp is expecting than one with a higher impedance, so I feel comfortable hooking this 4-ohm cab to the 8-ohm output on the amp.
However, given the choice I'd obviously rather have all the impedances match, I'm just not sure how to do it. Since the speakers are each 8 ohms, wired in parallel to give 4, I suppose I could just connect each one to the head separately. Looking at the schematic, though, it looks like both OT secondary leads go to the "extension speaker" jack first, and plugging into that changes which tap is used. It makes sense in my head that you would plug one 8-ohm speaker into the "speaker" output and use only the 8-ohm tap, plug a second 8-ohm speaker into the "extension speaker" output and use only the 4-ohm tap for both, or plug one 4-ohm speaker into the "extension speaker" output and use only the 4-ohm tap. Is this how it works or am I missing something?
Schematic for those interested:
http://www.stratopastor.org.uk/strat...-140-schem.pdf
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