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The 2 transistors look as though they could be 2n3055 or similar but RCA. Is my guess that it would be 20-25 watts---close?I've seen 2N3055 pairs pushed to 75W.
I've seen them, because they fail often at that level.
I'd have to sniff your dust to guess how courageously they were driven.
And if not marked "2N3055", they could be much wimpier parts in TO-3 cases (before plastic-pack, we put 15W parts in TO-3), or they could be some bigger parts. In a complete organ, not subject to user-shorts or prolonged overdrive, I could imagine 100W from a pair of big-die TO-3s. Heck, I have a Yamaha bass-amp, honest 100W sine power, just one pair of TO-3 outputs, no trouble.
In any case, there is a major disconnect. Organs don't distort. Guitars do. 20 sine-wave watts in organ duty is never much over 20W of heat for more than a part-second, and likely under 10W average in loud passages. A guitarist will linger at 10W much of the night, blip past 20W, and may hold 35 heat-watts for a few distorted power-chords. One night of that can destroy a speaker which lived for years on the same amp in organ-duty.
What FYL said. Older shellac coils 1"-1.25" can take 10W-20W of heat. For undistorted full-orchestra playback, you can use 50W-100W amp. For distorted guitar, 5W-10W is safe, maybe 7W-14W depending how hard you whang it and how much your amp sags.
Stick this guy in a Champ. There's loads of 50W gitar-rated Twelves on the market, that's what you should be using.
Wizzers are cheap-tricks. Nearly nobody bothers to get it right, nor has the production control to keep it right. I spent a LOT of time with E-V SP12... they made an honest try, but I can still hear those wizzers wizzing their own song no matter what is playing. I've lived with dozens of low-price wizzers and got what I paid for. I have not worked with Lowthers.... I believe a good wizzer is possible, just not easy, and that at usual price/quality tradeoffs, a Three and a cap is a better deal.
FWIW: the Curvilinear cone on JBL D-130 does pretty much what the wizzer on E-V SP15 did, only better. Adds an octave of dispersion. On full-range music, you still want a tweeter, so why futz-around?
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an old EV WolverineYes, it does. As hi-fi speakers, the SP12 and the 8" Wolverine sounded a lot like guitar speakers. It could be either/or. Certainly not a modern-fad hi-fi, and certainly not any of the several styles of guitar speaker, but usable for either and sometimes amazingly "right" for certain sounds.