The only reason for the question, I have five AO-43 Hammond chassis's I already made Head and Combo version paper face plates, from free software with help from a member here. These heavy paper faceplates will be covered with thin plexiglass material. Took a lot of time getting the faceplates to look right. So, I bought the chassis's with the intent to sell them on say Craigslist or FleaBay but I have several friends that are gigging older players to peddle them.
The head version I made is a great amp, no cab yet. I made several mistakes mostly the layout locations but worked out all the space problems, cap location, small bd to fit, easy to get to replace parts, etc.
Hence, the question. I always hated lugging a combo around, especially with two twelves, so I thought a single is lighter. But then I thought, like jjasilli mentioned, a Plexi is a head, usually. And two "light" trips isn't heavy, enables one to carry a two twelve spk cab (much better tone), second trip the head. But on the other hand, there's the other side of the coin...? Though maybe I'd get a majority here but got the same feedback as I was thinking, six to one, half a dozen to the other.
Doing the combo, single twelve, thought probably best to put the tubes on the side of the chassis, pointing down, like a Marshall 18 watt combo, much cooler than inside the cab even with a vent and assesssable. I like carrying one amp, one trip but two light trips...?
I think I might do one combo and the rest heads. The head cab is much easier to make, looks very cool. Keep a head and combo for myself, sell three heads, maybe make more.
I made a lot of design mistakes, very small chassis (thin) but now I got that all figured out.
My question is answered, there is no answer,

but if there were, probably a head version.
Here's the head, no cab, I have added numbers to the faceplate and can easily print it out to exact dimensions but much easier to take the file to a print shop and have it printed on heavyweight paper (pretty cheap), cut the holes and cover with thin plastic. Looks professional.
Thanks for the replies,
the dude