Dave Sloven
Ambassador of DOOM!
New cab day! Well, a couple of days ago, anyway. So I posted a photo of it in the thread about my retube but I've had it apart since and found out a couple of things.
1. The Stephens badge is metal and quite easy to remove with two philips head screws
2. The cab has removable casters - the clip type which I haven't quite worked out how to remove yet - and rubber feet as well
3. The worst part of the cab is the ABS plastic dish that contains the PCB for mono/stereo operation, three out of six screw holes (on the corners) broke when I removed them to free up the jack plate so that I could remove the back board of the cab.
The cab is constructed from 15mm 18 ply baltic marine birch. The sides are fingerjointed together and the baffle seems to be screwed or nailed to the sides. The centre brace for the backboard seems to be a block of regular birch ply and the back board is MDF. The tolex seems to be the same hard-wearing type on my 6534+ head. Everything in the cab seems to be in good condition although I think someone at the factory overtightened the screws on the plastic jack plate and cracked them
The hole on the back board for the jack plate is larger than most of the simple metal dish type jack plates out there. I will have to go with a bigger six screw hole dish. All of the ones I see for sale have multiple holes in them (e.g., for speakons) so I am looking to source undrilled blank plates so that I can drill a single hole in the middle to take one mono Cliff jack (like on Marshall cabs). I will ditch the mono/stereo PCB and rewire it old school as series/parallel 16 ohms mono only with the one jack, with enough 22AWG wire that I can lay the backboard flat on the floor without disconnecting the jack. Together with installing the four Celestion Vintage 30 speakers out of the Ashton cab this should be an extremely nice cab. The Stephens speakers will be an easy retrofit into the Ashton, which has quite a nice simple mono wiring harness with no PCB. Then I will be able to sell the Ashton cab on maybe for $150-200.
I'll post some photos below if I can get some nice ones showing the damaged jack plate.
1. The Stephens badge is metal and quite easy to remove with two philips head screws
2. The cab has removable casters - the clip type which I haven't quite worked out how to remove yet - and rubber feet as well
3. The worst part of the cab is the ABS plastic dish that contains the PCB for mono/stereo operation, three out of six screw holes (on the corners) broke when I removed them to free up the jack plate so that I could remove the back board of the cab.
The cab is constructed from 15mm 18 ply baltic marine birch. The sides are fingerjointed together and the baffle seems to be screwed or nailed to the sides. The centre brace for the backboard seems to be a block of regular birch ply and the back board is MDF. The tolex seems to be the same hard-wearing type on my 6534+ head. Everything in the cab seems to be in good condition although I think someone at the factory overtightened the screws on the plastic jack plate and cracked them
The hole on the back board for the jack plate is larger than most of the simple metal dish type jack plates out there. I will have to go with a bigger six screw hole dish. All of the ones I see for sale have multiple holes in them (e.g., for speakons) so I am looking to source undrilled blank plates so that I can drill a single hole in the middle to take one mono Cliff jack (like on Marshall cabs). I will ditch the mono/stereo PCB and rewire it old school as series/parallel 16 ohms mono only with the one jack, with enough 22AWG wire that I can lay the backboard flat on the floor without disconnecting the jack. Together with installing the four Celestion Vintage 30 speakers out of the Ashton cab this should be an extremely nice cab. The Stephens speakers will be an easy retrofit into the Ashton, which has quite a nice simple mono wiring harness with no PCB. Then I will be able to sell the Ashton cab on maybe for $150-200.
I'll post some photos below if I can get some nice ones showing the damaged jack plate.

