I tried to post this earlier but it did not show up. If it is redundant, my apologies.
I have a question about the speaker jacks in my '67 Spectrum II.
I did a cap job and added a 3-prong cord and the amp sounds great. My No. 1.
When I had it on my bench, I noted that one of the speaker jacks is a double shorting jack. Pretty common in British amps, but haven't seen one in a US amp before. I mentioned this to a pal and we have a disagreement about the jack's purpose.
My Assumptions:
(1) The speaker jacks (labeled 4 and 8-ohm) are independent in that each taps the transformer at its stated load.
(2) When the 8 ohm jack is used, the 4-ohm tap is shorted out.
(3) When two speakers are attached, the shorting jack is used to default both jacks to the 4 ohms tap so the amp is looking for two 8-ohm cabinets in parallel.
My pal says NO. He says the shorting jack is a no-load protection device for the transformer (I know Fender started using this trick in the early piggyback amps in case someone fired up the amp with no speaker load). He says that when two speakers are used, the amp is still looking for a 8-ohm load AND a 4-ohm load.
I'm no expert, but my rudimentary knowledge of transformers tells me that is like saying you should shift into 1st gear AND 3rd gear before releasing the clutch. Also, the suggested design makes no commercial sense -- Sunn would have to set up its cabinets for alternative loads (I can see switchable 4/16 load, but a 4/8? Don't think so).
So . . . am I right, wrong, half-right?
Thanks for clearing this up.