The golden rule no matter what the amps make is. Never use a cabinet of lesser impedance than the rated output as this will overload the OT and may potentially damage it.
The only exception would be for Bass amps that can handle a 2 ohm load. Always read the manual so you do not wind up with an expensive repair down the road. I run a total load of 2 ohms on my TT800 but it can support that (also has a switch for that connection).
Worse thing one could do, and I can see it happen is one may plug in two 8 ohm cabs into the two 8 ohm jacks. The same could hold true if both cabs would have a 4 ohm switch and they were both plugged into the 4 ohm jacks. Understand the basics of what parallel means.
Total load (parallel) = (cab1 x cab2) / (cab1 + cab2). this is the standard equation. They easy thing to work out if the cabs are the same, just divide the single cab impedance by 2. or do the math which will have the same result. If the cabs are different, do the full math if you want any sense of accuracy.
The only exception would be for Bass amps that can handle a 2 ohm load. Always read the manual so you do not wind up with an expensive repair down the road. I run a total load of 2 ohms on my TT800 but it can support that (also has a switch for that connection).
Worse thing one could do, and I can see it happen is one may plug in two 8 ohm cabs into the two 8 ohm jacks. The same could hold true if both cabs would have a 4 ohm switch and they were both plugged into the 4 ohm jacks. Understand the basics of what parallel means.
Total load (parallel) = (cab1 x cab2) / (cab1 + cab2). this is the standard equation. They easy thing to work out if the cabs are the same, just divide the single cab impedance by 2. or do the math which will have the same result. If the cabs are different, do the full math if you want any sense of accuracy.