I appreciate all the tips. It apeears as though we're all a bit familiar with the CC2X in this respect, yet still equally in the dark as to which specific tube, if any, controls the normal channel.
The basic layout of the oldAC30, and the CC2X, at least to the eye, looks quite similar. The older AC 30s of course, had three separate channels, with the vibrato channels accesible only on the vibrato channel, and six inputs- a high and a low for each channel. These amps have more preamp tubes-the exact number of which escapes me at the moment, and I don't really want to go peeking inside the amp to count them

. The new CC2X has 3 preamp tubes. I switched out the original Chinese tubes awhile back, as they were complete rubbish. the power amp tubes, as well as the recitifier were of Russian and Eastern European origing, respectively. The Chinese preamp tubes started making all sorts of noise within a year after purchase of the amp. I switched them out for some Groove Tubes and hadn't had any trouble with amp noise until the last time I used the CC2X.
The too short speaker wire length of hard wired speaker wire is a Vox characteristic not limited to the new CC models. My old AC 30 had this "feature" as well. I had a non shorting(?) speaker jack installed by my local amp tech on the underside of my AC30 to deal with this on my vintage AC30. On the new amp, I was unaware of the problem until I decided to change the tubes, which was when I discoverd that
(a) the new AC30s have two more screws securing the chassis tray(hidden on the UNDERSIDE of the chassis tray-"why won't the tray move"?) than the old AC30s do, and
(b) Just like the vintage AC30s, the hard wired speaker leads are too short!
I wish I'd bought my amp from North Coast Music, as they change out the lousy tubes and modify the speaker jack like so
in order to facilitate tube changes and servicing. I might do this modification myself in lieu of having a speaker jack added, but then again, a speaker jack might be a more secure option.
In any case, I was able to slide the chassis only about 1/3 to 1/2 of the way out of the chassis before I ran out of Speaker wire length(thanks Korg/Vox), but it was enough to be able to acess everything. It's going to be a complete nightmare for my amp tech. I think I'm just going to have him hard wire the whole amp when the time comes. He converts pc board amps to hand wired quite often and knows the craft well. I will definitely have the too short spekaer wire problem dealt with!