Either of the de Lisle switchers should work with some caveats. You have to observe proper impedance matching between amp and speaker cab, or you can damage an amp. Also, you can’t simply turn on all your tube amps, ready to output to the cab, and use a passive switcher to switch between them, because that will damage an amp. You have to observe a specific procedure, doing things in the correct order, to keep from blowing up your amps.
(edit) Kudos to
@Bob411 for helping me fix a few errors about impedance, solid state vs tube amps.
Tube amps need to have a speaker-type load attached or they get damaged. Therefore, with a passive switching box, amps have to be put in bypass, or off, before you change the switcher to a different amp.
If you get mixed up with the switcher, select the wrong tube amp, it’s pretty easy to blow up an amp. If you forget to switch a tube amp to bypass, or off, before using the selector to switch amps, you will likely blow up an amp.
You have to be careful about impedance matching between amp and cab. With solid state amps, you should not attach them to speaker cabs that have ohm ratings below the amp minimum ohm rating. With tube amps, you can damage them hooking them to cabs well below their minimum ohm rating, or by attaching them to cabs above their maximum ohm rating.
Tube amps are very sensitive to impedance mismatches. Matching exact 1:1 ohm rating (ex: 8 ohm output to 8 ohm cab) is best. Anything else could risk damage. However, in practical terms, most amps made by Marshall, Fender, Vox, Mesa, can handle 4 ohm, 8 ohm, or 16 ohm cabs.
I thought about getting a passive switcher to make it convenient to switch between different amps and different cabs. However, the convenience also makes it easier to blow up an amp by making a simple mistake. The active boxes, with protections built into them, are safer, but more expensive.
I opted for adding labels with cab ohm ratings to my wires. I have to turn amps to bypass, or off, manually unplug, and plug in wires, to change amps, and cabs, but it forces me to pay attention.
I have not blown up an amp since labeling the wires. Years ago, I blew the output transformer of an Epiphone Valve Junior with an impedance mismatch. Thank goodness I learned that lesson on that cheap POS amp.