Fast forward to the present. Now a 50 watt+ Marshall slut and in love with the 1936 cab having built two I decided it was time to revisit the cube. Not for the small size but to replicate the internal volume of the 1936 to see if the speaker orientation would make a difference. The other benefit was I figured out with the help of Legos [I'm storing my now teen aged son's stash] was how to make the corner geometry work with finger joints - use a corner block.
The initial cab is pine with the option of building a pretty one later - that plan has been scrapped as you will see below. The corners will be walnut and the leading edge will be double thickness leopard wood with the traditional 1" round that Marshall uses. Luckily I had built a new finger joint jig for the last curly maple cab as this cab would test the consistency of jigs and cutting techniques severely. I did have to build a new cross cut sled so damn big I named it sledzilla as it covers the top of my saw.
There are 110 joints [one of the reasons I scrapped a pretty wood version] and it was a marathon cutting session. I marked the bejeepers out of the four sides to ensure I didn't miss cut - so tired of going to the wood store for more. I have always enjoyed cutting / sanding pine works like butter. I only had one joint that was about .010" off and required a bit of wacking to encourage it to play nice.
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Angling the baffles back a 2° was fun with a center post.
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The grill is angled and required a jig to hold the frame straight as the grill cloth was stretched and stapled - and unstapled and restapled and then unstapled and restapled.
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Working from the sides instead of the ends yielded a result I can live with.
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A bit of oil and a pair of Jim's magnificent Scumback J75LD's and it was ready to play. Took it to a jam session last night and it sounded like a wide dispersion 1936 - no weird artifacts or frequency loss. Sounded great with a JMP 2204 and magnificent with a Satellite Barracuda.
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I haven't attached a handle yet as I'm not sure the best balance spot is. One side bummer - it's tall enough that it won't fit under my pickup bed cover when it is closed.
Russ