I'm pretty sure the transformers will go bad. I might be wrong though
Actually the first post it right on. It is a SS head that is rated at 200W at a minimum load of 4 ohms. Since it is a SS head, you can use a cabinet that is a bigger load than 4 ohms, so you are correct, plugged into a 8 ohm cabinet, the amp will put out 100W.
SS and Tube amps are different beasts, SS amps don't have output transformers with taps for different loads like tube amps, most of them don't have output transformers transformers at all, the output of the power transistors is tied directly to the load. Also, most SS doesn't get angry and blow up if you don't have a load hooked up to it at all, meaning no cabinet plugged in. But don't run it with a load less than the minimum rated load, in this case 4 ohms, and never plug in a cable that shorts the tip to the sleeve (into any amp tube or SS).
An 8 ohm load is not a bigger load than 4 ohms, it is less of a load. As impedance goes down the load increases and vice versa. Most solid state amps will produce roughly 65% of their power into double the impedance.
Solid state amps do not like direct shorts and can quickly burn up but will work all day without a speaker load.
Tube amps will be quickly destroyed with no speaker load on the secondary side of the output transformer. Tube amps can deal much easier with a shorted secondary.
Check out how the speaker jacks are wired on any Fender amp since they started making "piggy-backs" - the jack is a shorting jack to protect the output transformer just in case someone forgot to plug their head into the speaker cabinet.
Posts like this cause people to burn up stuff everyday. Where do you get this? I actually have a BS in electronics, this is first semester basic stuff. 8 ohms is more impedance than 4 ohms, if it wasn't ohms would not be a very good unit of measure.
You are correct on this, but it is the same thing I said.
Not a bet I would take, with a direct short the lack of load will transfer to the output circuit, and based on a bad experience where a cat rewired a cabinet for me, you will see a flash, that would be output tubes, it also blew some traces off the board, but, the output transformer was fine. It didn't take long at all after the wires touched.
I don't have a Fender amp to check out, but, see my previous answer, I highly doubt they are shorting the the 2 speaker lines, I'm sure the designers know what would happen. In fact, all of the amp protection circuits I am aware of use a large 150 or so ohm resistor that is in line with the speaker jack when nothing is plugged into it to protect the amp in case nothing is plugged into it. Shorting is bad for SS or tube.
Nope, didn't sleep through that class at all. In this discussion load and impedance are essentially the same things, all things equal, a circuit can put more power into a smaller load (RL for theoretical purposes in my texts). A lower R (or X for impedance) will allow the circuit to generate more current, hence more power. This is why too small of a load will cause the amp to try to generate more current than it can until it burns itself up which will happen quite quickly with a dead short.
I checked some of the schematics, that short also seems to short the feedback loop to the PI tube to ground which would also sink the signal going into the PI tube to ground essentially killing the signal to the power tubes. No signal in means the power tubes aren't trying to put out anything. I could be wrong, I didn't go through all the schematics.
If you don't believe me, and apparently you don't, contact someone whose opinion you will trust, try Bruce at www.missionamps.com, Mike or Bill at www.soldano.com, or there are lots of other resources, as always, be careful of forum posts (including here), anyone can post on a forum.
Unfortunately what I'm afraid we have accomplished is to further confuse the original poster. I think we do agree that if his solid state amp is rated at 200W at a minimum load of 4 ohms, it is perfectly safe to use an 8 ohm cabinet and the only consequence will be that the amp will put out less power, roughly 50% of its maximum output.
Right?
Glad somebody finally mentioned this.
I'm wondering if Floyd1 is still reading...you there Floyd1?
LOL