
Leaving aside their quirks, OA/026 and OS/065 have all the appearance of being master sheets, corrected and brought up to date by erasure and redrawing. OS/065 was circulated in the UK too though. OA/026 was the sheet included in the Thomas Organ Service Manual of 1966, and seems also to have been the one more frequently sent out to service engineers in the United Kingdom. The circuit for the AC30/4 will be provided on a separate page.Īs for the sheets below, OA/025 and OS/065 are to all intents and purposes one and the same - "Works Use Only" first drawn out on 29th April 1960 same list of additions and dates down the right-hand side the final date 11th September 1964. It seemed rather redundant to gather together copies of things that are currently in circulation in publications and on the web. Vox discontinued the AC30CC2 in January, 2010.The circuit diagrams on this page all come from hard copies - sometimes copies of copies - made numbers of decades ago. The AC30CC2 utilized two 12" Vox Wharfedale GSH-1230-8 eight ohm speakers, wired in series to sixteen ohms and designed to tonally resemble the famous "green back" speaker frequently used by Vox from the 70s through the 90s.Ĭlick here to read about the circuitry and all the electronic features of the AC30CC2.Ī two button VF002 foot switch was included with this amp to actuate the reverb and tremolo. It was produced for Vox by the International Audio Group in Shenzhen, China.


The AC30CC2 was designed in 2004 by then Vox lead engineer Steve Grindrod. gold plated logo, gold grill molding, white grill piping, three Vox handles, and eight black plastic two pin corners. The all tube, 30 watt amp featured a baltic birch enclosure with all the classic Vox cosmetic touches: basket weave vinhyde, brown Vox diamond grill (or fret) cloth, gold piping. First introduced to the US market in April 2005, the AC-30CC2 was the most popular amplifier model in the Custom Classic Series.
