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BlackOut8910
Member
I don't know if it is a "flaw" per se, but they were designed before 7 string guitars, baritone guitars, dropped tunings, etc. were common, so they weren't really built for producing sound of those low freqs. Neither was any other cabinet of the day. The slant cab is a little more naturally "stiff" due ot the angle in the baffle, but both styles can benefit from tieing the baffle to the cabinet rear wall - IF you are going to take it down low. It won't be as good as an over-size Mesa box for the low end, but the Mesa benefits from being built with such use in mind. I have a 4212MS, and it si solid, gig-worthy construction, and the metal grill is much more road-worthy than grill cloth, and offers more protection for the speaker cones when cargo shifts in the band trailer. Hell I even like the Eminence-built "Peavey Sheffield" speakers. The only knock I have on the cabs is the casters are little weak, and if you are moving them all the time, you'll eventually want to upgrade those. If you are planning to replace the drivers any way, you may as well find an unloaded or an inexpensive cab, so long as the wood and construction are good. If you aren't playing super-low freqs, the cab will be find as it is.Interesting, was that a design flaw the Peavey 412M ? Do other manufactures do that inside front loaded cabs, it would makes sense becuase they do it with rearloaded cabs .