I had the cabinet built (I lack the tools and more importantly, the skill). Joints are all dovetailed; cabinet is white pine. I didn't want a tolex finish, just a personal thing; took three coats of stain to get the right dirty blonde look I was going for. The cabinet was built to be oversized; I could easily swap the baffle and put a 15" or 2 10"s in it if I wanted. White pine is very light, the cab surprised me for being such a feather weight. Add in transformers and a decent speaker and you probably go to 30 lbs or so when all is said and done.
I didn't install a vrm; I might though. The amp is loud on its own; add in an efficient speaker and its pretty hard to take the volume above 1 in any sort of single person use.
The build went very well. The instructions included are pretty clear, and the build diagram is as well. There is also a good thread on this site with photos that helped me understand a couple of things when I wasn't certain. I was pretty good about double checking everything as I went and when I was done, the amp fired up properly first time.
A shot from the final soldering phase.
Soundwise, brighter in tone than I'm used to. You hear people describe Vox's as "chimey" and I can see how that word comes into play in comparison to american sounding amps. The amp is very articulate; everything you do (for good or bad) on the fretboard comes thru the amp.
With the speaker and cabinet setup I've got going on, everything sounds BIG...there is so much depth and dimension to the sound that my other amps all sound tinny and weak at the same volume level. I'll probably sell off my Traynor 40w to clear up the floor space.