Attempting an open back mod.

Lucius Paisley

New member
Has anybody tried to remove the back of an Orange cabinet (closed back)? Because I can't get the bastard to come off. Is there any particular kind of leverage device I should look into?
 
Are there screws on the back like on a Marshall that can be removed? If not, that means the speakers are loaded from the front and the back cannot be removed easily. It’ll be jointed and glued in. You can confirm this from the front by checking if the speakers are in fact loaded from the front. You’ll see the whole outside lip that attaches it to the baffle.
 
You might need to remove the side handles and carefully use something to make contact with the inside of the back near the edge, and then use a hammer or mallet to gently tap the back out.
 
Are there screws on the back like on a Marshall that can be removed? If not, that means the speakers are loaded from the front and the back cannot be removed easily. It’ll be jointed and glued in. You can confirm this from the front by checking if the speakers are in fact loaded from the front. You’ll see the whole outside lip that attaches it to the baffle.

All the screws have been taken out, I even undid the jack plate for safety (last thing I want to do is rip that cable out). I might need to buy something like a paint/putty scraper as I have seen in some videos. I tried a knife, but that was awkward and stupidly dangerous.
 
It's probably glued in. You could try a drill and a jigsaw to cut out a portion of the back that you can save to reinstall making it a convertible. It might even sound better as a partially opened back.

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It's probably glued in. You could try a drill and a jigsaw to cut out a portion of the back that you can save to reinstall making it a convertible. It might even sound better as a partially opened back.

Sent from my SM-A115A using Tapatalk

If this goes the way I think it's going to go, I won't be able to save anything to make it convertible, but I have another cab, so I'm not worried about "ruining" this one.

PCC108a.jpg PCC108b.jpg
It won't be this neat but this is the plan.
 
I think you'll find cabinets are designed a particular way for a reason. Taking the back off will give it more bass response, but will also likely make it flubby, loose and unclear, and at small sizes, farty. You might be better off just replacing the speaker with one with better frequency response and better quality cone and coil/transducer weight/strength/materials, but put the cabinet back back on the way it was intended.
 
I think you'll find cabinets are designed a particular way for a reason. Taking the back off will give it more bass response, but will also likely make it flubby, loose and unclear, and at small sizes, farty. You might be better off just replacing the speaker with one with better frequency response and better quality cone and coil/transducer weight/strength/materials, but put the cabinet back back on the way it was intended.

The point is to find out. It's an inexpensive cabinet that I already do not particularly like. If I make it worse, that's a shame and into the trash it goes, if I like the change, then lucky me, I didn't have to spend money I didn't want to spend in the first place chasing speakers.
 
If it's a front loader, the back panel - even if it has screws - might be sealed with caulk inside or even glued.
Or it might just be stick.
 
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