I think I see now...let me know if I'm wrong. I wasn't splitting the load when I was talking about two cabs.
That's why two 8ohm cabs would be at 4ohms rather than 8ohms even though both plugs were used and the 16ohm was cancelled.
Even though the output was 8ohms, since it was two cabs the impedance is 4ohms for the two.
Two 8 ohm cabs wired in
parallel make a total load of 4 ohms, the same two cabs in
series would have a 16 ohm load.
Sunn amps like yours connect the two output jacks in
parallel when both are used, which in effect connects the two cabinets in a parallel circuit for a total of load of 4 ohms.
However since the output is 16/8 ohm split....the 4ohm output is unnatural and that's why you guys suggested
having the tap altered to 8/4....to match the cabs I want to use. I think I was getting what the cabs do and head do confused.
If you look at the back of your amp, you will see a huge chunk of iron on the far right side. That's the output transformer. It is actually a huge coil (winding) of copper wire wound around an iron core, and it's primary function is to match speaker impedance with the output stage of the amp. On all of the old Sunn amps, there are three wires referred to as "taps" that "tap" into this winding at different places (one is for 4 ohm loads, one for 8 ohm loads, and one for 16 ohm loads) but only two of the three are used for the two output jacks,
the third one is still there, but unused.
The "S" series Sunn tube amplifiers were never sold without a matching speaker cabinet, you couldn't buy just the head you had to buy the package, but they always had the option of an additional, or extention, cabinet. If the matching cabinet for the amp was 16 ohms, they used the transformers 16 and 8 ohm taps (like your 1200S) and if the matching cab was 8 ohms they used the 8 and 4 ohm taps so that if and when you used another
matching cabinet, the impedance would be correct. Two 16's would be 8, two 8's would be 4 because of the parallel wired jacks in the amp.
As I said above, the third tap is still there, to make your output jacks 8 and 4 ohms you only switch ONE wire. No major surgery, and just as easy to restore back to original.
So really with this head you would want two 16ohm cabs running at 8ohms because of the two cab split. Right?
I mean you could run just one 16ohm cab in the 16 output, but it would probably be louder(fuller) with the two cabs at 8ohms.
Absolutely, but not
probably louder(fuller);
most definitely louder(fuller)!
The only problem now is finding a tech around where I live...which is nowhere, louisiana.
thanks guys, robin
Can't help you much with that one. You don't really need a guitar amp tech, just about any electrical tech (stereo,TV, radio, etc.) should be able to fix you up.