Let me explain a little first... I am using a Boss BCB-60 with two distortion pedals, a fuzz, a noise suppressor and a crybaby. All the signals are coming through except for my wah which is acting like a killswitch whenever I activate it. Everything is in the right place (plugged in the right order) so I can't see what is wrong, and need help!
Yes, the amps stay the same but the voltage doubles. If you connect in parallel the volts stay the same and the amps double.
amps
Yes if the frequences and amps are the same amount
every guitar has a tone range. every effect pedal has a tone range. and thus, every amp has a tone range. amps can make a world of a difference in the overall tone of the guitar or bass. in the battle between solid state and tube amps, no solid state that I've heard, even comes close to the beauty of hot tubes.
To split a guitar signal to two amps for a more dynamic sound, you can use a device called an ABY pedal. This pedal allows you to send your guitar signal to two different amplifiers simultaneously, giving you the ability to blend different tones and create a more versatile sound.
To run a monitor speaker or to connect several amps in series to pre-amp your amp.
You would connect them in parallel to increase the amerage. If you connect them in series it would increase the voltage. Connected in series-parallel would increase both voltage and amerage.
You can find one a pedal power generator.com and the price is $479 dollars. 0-40 volts,output 20 Amps,peak watt: 300 Watts. The model is PPG-B300W and there are other generators as well.
Volts x Amps = Watts On 120 V you can connect 1200 W...although you might want to leave some room.
if you connect a 0.5 ohm load to it, the power supply will try to push 4 amps through it. but 4 amps@ 2 volts is quite a lot, and it may not succeed.
You need a 3 conductor #10 cable. A #10 wire is rated at 30 amps.
Just connect the circuit. It will only draw the amps it needs to operate. It is just like connecting a 100 watt light bulb that draws way less than 1 amp, to a 20 amp household circuit.