VintageKustom.com
VintageKustom.com is your source for literature and information on the tuck-and-roll vintage Kustom amps from the 60's and 70's, as well as their related products such as guitars and organs . We provide a webboard for help with kustom gear history, technical information and repairs as well as discussions with other collectors.

Home » VintageKustom.com » Replacement Part Suggestions » wiring for a 4-12b cabinet
Show: Today's Messages :: Polls :: Message Navigator
Switch to threaded view of this topic Create a new topic Submit Reply
wiring for a 4-12b cabinet [message #6157] Sat, 17 September 2005 00:03 Go to next message
ajenks is currently offline  ajenks
Messages: 2
Registered: September 2005
Junior Member
I recently aquired a Kustom IV Lead with a 412B cabinet. I'm pretty sure it was manufactured in early '76. My problem is the person that I got it from decided to gut the cabinet. All that is left inside is the speakers. I think I have 4 8ohm speakers. What do I need to rebuild this cabinet? Also I'm not sure of the output impedence of the Amp. Any help would be appreciated.

[Updated on: Sun, 18 September 2005 01:52]

Report message to a moderator

Re: wiring for a 4-12b cabinet [message #6161 is a reply to message #6157] Mon, 19 September 2005 08:31 Go to previous messageGo to next message
stevem is currently offline  stevem
Messages: 4745
Registered: June 2004
Location: NY
Senior Member
That head will run fine at 4 ohms, but if you have 8 ohm speakers you will have to wire them to end up with 8 ohms, you other choise is 2 ohms(two low a impeadance). Their is two ways you can do this, put 2 pairs of the speakers in parallel for 2 ohms, and then serise those two pairs to get 8 ohms.Or put two pairs in serise for 16 ohms, and then parallel those two to get back down to 8 ohms.I would try it both ways, as one way you will have more high end, and the other way you will have more low end as the inductance value changes with the wiring pattern.
Re: wiring for a 4-12b cabinet [message #6767 is a reply to message #6157] Sun, 12 March 2006 14:47 Go to previous messageGo to next message
ajenks is currently offline  ajenks
Messages: 2
Registered: September 2005
Junior Member
I'm missing input jacks also. Any idea where I can find jack plates that are similar to the originals? One more thing. I know there were 2 1/4" jacks, but I'm not sure if they were for wiring 2 412's in series or parallel. Any help is appreciated.
Re: wiring for a 4-12b cabinet [message #6771 is a reply to message #6157] Mon, 13 March 2006 07:55 Go to previous message
stevem is currently offline  stevem
Messages: 4745
Registered: June 2004
Location: NY
Senior Member
If you log on to parts express, they carry all sorts of flat and recessed , single and dual jack plates.I would opt for a STEEL type jack plate if they offer one that will cover the area needed. I do not think you will ever need to play thru more than 4-12s but the original jack plate had the jacks in parallel. With 4 8 ohm speakers their is only two different impedances you can wire the cab for, 8 or 16 ohms, so you would wire for 8 ohms. you can get this two ways(1) wire 2 speakers in serise, than parallel those two pairs to the jack(S). Or wire each pair in parallel and then feed them in serise off the jack.Each way will sound slightly different,one way will be brighter then the other, I would try them both and pick what you like. If you wire in parallel, and you get a jack plate big enough to mount a mini toggle switch on, you can cut out 2 speakers and inturn cut the sound pressure in half if you want, this will be 4 ohms to the amp. 4-12s can be quite loud by the time you get the tone you want, halving the speakers may help.try it when you are wiring things up.
  Switch to threaded view of this topic Create a new topic Submit Reply
Previous Topic: Reverb Tank for SC Series 150 Combo Needed
Next Topic: 2x15 measurements
Goto Forum:
  

-=] Back to Top [=-
[ Syndicate this forum (XML) ] [ RSS ] [ PDF ]

Current Time: Tue Jun 11 04:02:18 EDT 2024