Michael,
Thanks for your reply! I also own a later Solarus....separate head and speaker, 6550's, larger transformers etc. Mine is near mint, 100% original. I just checked it......the head is wired for 8 ohms while the speaker cab is wired for 4 ohm (even the badge on the back says Solarus, 4 ohm)!
So, perhaps the factory wasn't paying attention to this mis-match, or didn't think it was important. Even though the output transformers had 4, 8 & 16 ohm taps; the outputs were specific and marked on the chassis; the feed back circuit was also tuned to a specific output tap; and they bothered to badge the speaker cab with a model name and impedance!
Baffling! Sunn amps were very well engineered in their day and beautifully built (I heard once that they recruited assemblers from nearby Tektronix of oscilloscope fame).
A 100% impedance mismatch is tolerable in tube amps (better if the speaker impedance is higher than the amp output). But a 200% mismatch in the 1968 Solarus would work the amp really hard and tend to eat output tubes. So re-wiring the speakers in series would match the head at 16 ohms. The down-side (other that altering the originality) is that if one speaker blows, you have an open circuit (or a dead short) without a load for the output transformer.
OK, I'm really getting into Amp-Geek-World here, so I'll sign off!
Thanks!
Ryan