Actually, I have a 2X12 cabinet that a friend picked up at a music show and gave me -- lovely, blond, all wood --- and !/8" too narrow for a BF Super chassis .... Some careful work with a pull saw and a couple of finger planes, and a standard chassis will now fit it. Still deciding what I want to do --
Some more follow up:
Once I turned the Super over, it was pretty clear that this was a professional, no expense spared job. All new Mercury Magnetics iron, including the reverb and choke .... but then .... 4 X 16-ohm Italian Jensen/Fender speakers which I surmise had to have been the originals from that 70W amp. Moreover, all the retaining nuts were loose. Coming as it did from a pawn shop in Newark, NJ, one doesn't have to be Sherlock Holmes to deduce that before pawning it, somebody put the old speakers back in, especially since the OT is a single, 2-Ohm output, and those speakers present a net 4-Ohm load. For the present, I've replaced them with 2 NOS UK Celestion 10s, a new Chinese Celestion 10-30, and a used Eminence Patriot Lil'Buddy. Not perfect, but WAY better and presenging a proper 2-ohm load.
Next, it struck me that, while it's been many years, my memory of Fenders was that they had way more lush reverbs. I pulled the tank, and it turned out to be out of a Marshall, probably valvestate, and was supposed to have been mounted vertically, jacks upward. I replaced it with my last US-Made Accutronics, and now .. .Surf City -- enough to make you seasick at abut 4 or 5 ...
As soon as I make some room on my bench, I'm going to pull the chassis, check all the voltages and bias, and likely install the pair of Genelex Gold Lion KT-66s I ordered about 30 minutes ago (already contacted Mercury Magnetics and confirmed that the PT has enough juice to handle the extra filament requirements.
It now sounds absolutely lovely -- like a black-face super should.
Where I go next -- still cogitating.
I have on hand my favorite speaker of all time -- a vintage Altec 417 15", 100W Alnico. It will fit perfectly in that 2X12 cabinet (which has the 12s staggered, one higher than the other, like a later Twin), with just a new baffle board. That, of course, will mean replacing the OT with one offering multiple outputs so as to match the 8-ohm speaker. That may be a way to go.
On the other hand, I could also spring for a smaller, 4X10 BF style cabinet (already have a nice BF Super Reverb faceplate), which I would have covered with standard black tolex and aged proper grillcloth -- just to complete the vibe.
I ALSO have on hand a Doug Hoffman AB763 eyelet board, and a Tweed Overdrive turret board, which I may put into that new chassis and the blond cabinet. I have on hand a lightly used set of PT and OT from an old Sundown that came with 2X6550s making 100W, so would probably use those regardless. No 5V output, so I'd have to add a small transformer if I want to use a tube rectifier, which I'd prefer in order to tame that power a bit. Have a pair of Gold Lion KT88s to go with it. I figure I could cathode bias it so it'll make ~60 Watts with the KT88s, or 30-ish with KT66s. I could wire the speakers for 16-ohms, and use the 8-ohm output from the OT to raise the effective primary impedance to what's called for for cathode biasing either of those tube sets.
I'm leaning in the direction of doing that first -- either with the AB763 board, or with the Tweed Overdrive circuit, but adding reverb and foot-switchablility for the OD. (Having heard the audio clips, I'm sort of leaning in that direction.) That way I won't start messing with a working amp until I have another one up and operating reliably.
Decisions decisions decisions!
If you like the form factor of a 2 x 12 cabinet (that would be bigger than I want) and you like (in general) a Super Reverb, than as you suggest, you can turn it into Blackface with a fairly small number of changes.
You sure the cabinet fits 2 - 12"?
Like this? 1981ish? http://www.tdpri.com/forum/amp-central-station/330292-mystery-blackface-mv-ul-super-reverb.html
"4 knobs on the non-reverb channel clenches it. It's a UL 70 Watter. Loud, hard, clean."