Certainly.... so long as the microphone has the appropriate connector.
A regular guitar amplifier is generally just the amp head itself (no speaker box), while a combo amp contains the amplifier and the speaker all in one containment box.
There are many places where one could purchase a bass guitar combo amp. The best places where one could purchase a bass guitar combo amp would be places like Amazon and Best Buy.
A guitar amp head is the part of an amplifier that contains the electronic components that amplify the signal from the guitar. It needs to be connected to a separate speaker cabinet to produce sound. A combo amp, on the other hand, combines the amp head and speaker in one unit.
Possibly. In my experience the bass will not work through a guitar amp?
A combo amplifier for a guitar contains a normal guitar amplifier and one to four speakers. A normal guitar amplifier does not contain speakers, but is able to send the signal to a speaker cabinet.
One combo is reverb and gain.
No, it doesn't come with an instrument cable.
There could be several reasons why your guitar is not playing through the amp. Check if the cables are properly connected, the volume on the guitar and amp is turned up, the amp is powered on, and the settings on the amp are correct. If everything seems fine, there may be an issue with the guitar, amp, or cables that require further troubleshooting or repair.
Bass amplifiers are not optimised for guitars, but technically? yes, they work with guitar.
truth is you can, but i don't know if it'd mess up your combo because of the wattage that you're running through it.
The low frequencies of the bass destroy a guitar amp , so use a bass amp.
There could be several reasons why your guitar is not producing sound through the amp. Check if the amp is turned on and the volume is up, the guitar cable is properly connected, the guitar's volume and tone knobs are adjusted correctly, and the amp settings are appropriate for the guitar. If these steps don't solve the issue, there may be a problem with the amp, guitar, or cable that requires further troubleshooting or repair.