Yes.
A passive sub-woofer does work when plugged in to an amplifier. In an active sub-woofer ("powered") the amplifier is built in.
Yes. An acoustic-electric guitar plugs into an amplifier the same way a regular electric guitar does.
when the guitar players play any kind of guitar as you can see there close to a micro phone which projects soundBaYmArFor electric guitars:They make wireless transmitters that plug into the guitar and it sends the signal to a reviver that is plugged into the amplifier.
through George Beauchamps invention called the single coil pickup and plugged into an amplifier.
An active antenna is powered antenna, this includes a RF amplifier and a power supply so it must be "plugged in" somewhere. A standard "passive" antenna has no amplifier.
== == If you have to ask a question like this please do not open the cover of the amplifier.
When you pluck a string on an electric guitar that is plugged in to an amplifier, the pick-ups underneath the strings "hear" the sound, and send it through to the amplifier, projecting the sound of the string plucked.
1. It's not on. 2. The guitar is not plugged into it. 3. You do not have the settings adjusted quickly. 4. It's broke.
Yes. Connect an audio cable to the headphone jack.
They echo the vibrations of the strings, making them louder. That is why an electric guitar is very quiet (when not plugged into an amplifier, obviously).
Without being plugged into an amplifier, a solid-body guitar cannot be heard further than 10 or 12 feet. The amplifier makes the guitar electronics sound loud enough to be heard by others . . . sometimes even too loud for others.
If you plug your headphones directly into your guitar you won't hear anything unless your headphone have some kind of amplifier built into them. You need to plug your guitar into something like a multi effects pedal or an amplifier that has an out put you can plug your headphones into