I have two 215S cabinets, one purchased new at Quigley Music in Kansas City in June 1971 (with a Sorado head - I was told this was the matching 215S cab) and the other one purchased used in 2007. These cabinets are the ones with two ports, one on each side of the middle of the front. Stock ohm rating was 8.
I had the speakers rebuilt in the '71 cab a couple of years ago - the speakers weren't blown, just worn out. The one I bought used needed rebuilding, too, as the speakers had a good full sound but were pretty fuzzy. The speaker tech was asked to set each cabinet at 8 ohms, as original.
Anyway, I've had them both for awhile now and notice that the '71 is slightly louder than the other. (Both cabinets sound great by themselves or together.) A friend suggested checking the ohms, thinking that perhaps one cabinet was set up for 4 ohms by mistake and is therefore louder. (I've tried using different heads and get the same result every time.) So after 37 years of ownership, I finally opened the back of my bought-new 215S cabinet to look at the speakers, get serial numbers and check the ohm values, as well as the other one.
No matter what I do with either cabinet, when I try to measure ohms at each speaker, the cabinet jack, etc., the ohmmeter goes to 0. This is the case when I plug a cable into the jack and measure the other end of the cable, too. Any suggestions here?
Also, and maybe Conrad can help here, to my shock and amazement the 1971 speakers have round black labels with GUITAR TRANSDUCER and have absolutely no identifying numbers on them anywhere. The other cabinet's speakers are square-black-label BASS TRANSDUCERS and have the following codes on them: 81.0010 and 67.7132. I presume that means they were made by Eminence, probably in the 32nd week of 1971.
So was I sold the wrong cabinet with my Sorado? Conrad, were "guitar transducers" also used for bass cabs? (The sound always has been outstanding, so this possibility never even crossed my mind.) And why aren't there any codes on them?
Some photos attached. In the meantime, thanks for reading this far!