Hmmmm.....maybe ~1/2 the work is already done for those of us on a homegrown quest for one of these.
Looks like Weber also sells a high powered switching board kit for pretty short coin (like....~$10!). Although I couldn't find a schematic or switch contact ratings/speeds, the descriptions imply that the HP version is intended for speaker switching applications.
https://taweber.powweb.com/store/chansword.htm
Anyone here have any experience with these switching board kits/assemblies? Clearly, some thought must be given to coil voltage supply issues. But..for a versitile stand alone unit it might make sense to power it with a wall wart or a separate 6V coil to avoid grounding issues when deriving that from a filament heater circuit. Looks like the pre-assembled unit does it with a wall wart.
Cheers,
Dave O.
Anyone know how to build one of these?
Moderators: pompeiisneaks, Colossal
Re: Anyone know how to build one of these?
cool....nice find...i think I'll order one....thanks! 
The Blues is my Business....
and Business is good.....
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Re: Anyone know how to build one of these?
Randal Aiken designed a similar switching system as a DIY project, but the schematic isn't online anymore. Seems to be exactly what Weber produces now. Don't know if it's allowed to post it here, shoot me an e-mail if you're interested.
... searching for the legendary fourth chord ...
Re: Anyone know how to build one of these?
I use one of these live with a 50 watt Dumble clone and a modded Bassman. I've never had a glitch, but beware, double/triple check your wiring every time you hook it up. Once in a dark club I hooked up speaker 1 to head 2. I'm just thankful that I noticed immediatly there was no hiss when I powered up my amps or I could've blown 2 OTs.Structo wrote:Well isn't there already the Headbone for this purpose?
http://www.tonebone.com/tb-headbone-vt.htm
Oh, and I've never had any switching noise or squeeling. Dumble isn't exactly hi-gain compared to a Rectifier or SLO.