The head is the top, where the tuning pegs are.
There are actually two types of pegs on a guitar: Tuning pegs Bridge pin pegs There are six of each. A tuning peg is a peg at the top of the guitar and is use to tighten the strings therefore 'tuning' the guitar. A bridge pin peg holds the other side of the string firmly in place.
Depends on how many strings the guitar has, A regular six string guitar will have six, a seven string guitar will have seven, a twelve string guitar will have twelve. Same thing with bass guitars Regular four string has four tuning pegs where as a five string bass has five,
Closest to the tuning pegs.
Yes, yes you can. If you couldn't tune it like a regular guitar they probably wouldn't of put tuner pegs on the tuners.
Guitar strings are anchored to the body of the guitar at the bridge using either bridge pegs, or slots or holes through the bridge. They are anchored at the other end of the guitar at the headstock by attaching to tuning gears or pegs.
The ones at end of a guitar (on the headstock) are called tuners, tuning pegs or tuning posts. The ones on the front of the body are the control pots/knobs (volume, tone).
Temperature changes and vibrations can cause strings to change in length or tuning pegs to move.
In order to tune the base strings on a guitar, turn the tuning pegs in a counterclockwise direction.
Im presuming you are talking about the Gibson robot guitars. Well they can tune themselves! No need to touch the tuning pegs, just fiddle with the knobs and the mechanised tuners will do all the work.
Turning the peg or moving frets makes the pitch (frequency) of a guitar string go higher or lower.
Pitch changes as you turn the tuning pegs. Volume can only be increased with an amplifier, then you just turn up the volume.