The original transformers were 4 ohm on one tap and 2.66 ohm on the other one. The same transformer was used in the 1484 (4 ohm tap) and the 1485, which used two output transformers. (2.66 ohm). The Weber will therefore work fine for the 1484 but for the 1485 there is a mismatch if used with the original speaker cabinet.johnnyreece wrote: ↑Fri Mar 14, 2025 12:54 pmI'm assuming you've fixed it already, but if not, this particular OT is one that Weber sells a copy of: https://www.tedweber.com/wot1484/
If anyone is interested, there is a long thread about modding one of the 1484's on the Hoffman forum from maybe 15 years ago that I did. I modded my brother's 1484 because it was missing the reverb and needed some work anyway and he said go ahead and make it better. Channel 2 I modified to make it more like a Fender for gain levels in the preamp, but still with the Baxandall tone stack, though I revoiced it to get the center of the stack up into guitar frequencies. Channel 1 is using an EF86 among other things. I added a doubler and an adjustable pot to the bias supply to get better range. I added a Fender reverb circuit in also, with a pan and made a new head for it. I elevated the heaters to reduce hum, and modified the grounding to have more control over where everything grounds. Added Fender style input and output jacks, with isolating washers so I could control the grounding. I put trem on both channels, and used the former ground switch to be able to switch the trem off for a slight gain boost. It can be either channel, or both channels, or off entirely. Built a 2x10 cabinet for it which is using Eminence Legend speakers. It sounds great and works well. A couple downsides though - due to the power transformer placement, there is only so much you can do and it will hum more with increased gain.
We used to run the amp before I modded it into an 8 ohm load for a long time with the 4 ohm tap and it surprisingly held up just fine. The mismatch made for a compressed sound that was lower volume, but more distorted and great for lead tones.
They're a pain to work on with the stupid layout and all the part leads wrapped around the terminals, but they're cool in a cheap sort of way. I have a stock one that needs a little TLC somewhere around here. One of these days I'll finish getting it working properly.
Greg