You may have to route a new hole in your guitar to fit the pickup you want inserted, or have it done for you professionally (Advisable!!). Put the pickup in place and wire it to the volume pot, which should connect to the tone pot and then to the output jack of the guitar.
Alternatively, if there is space, usually if you have a higher action on your guitar, you could simply screw the pickup to the body/pick guard and the wire it up (or the other way round).
route also known as cut the wood to make a place for the pickup, an angled pickup say the left side is slanted a bit more down than the right side means the you'll have a little more response out of the high 3 strings we focus on in the neck position... and vice versa if you want less response for the treble part. but no harm or anything bad about just routing a guitar for another pickup thats perfectly straight like _________
through a guitar with passive pickups , take out the old pots (things under the knobs in the guitar) , take out the old input jack and replace them all with the new active pickup ones. After words put in all the new stuff, connect the pickups and you're done. I recommend the X series ones as they are a lot easier to do, plus once their in properly you can switch them any time you want. If its hard just pay the 50-100$ for a guitar tech to do it. Craigslist has some cheap ones.
the only way to hook rock-smith to a acoustic guitar is to buy a pickup that mounts into the sound hole. this requires drilling a hole in the guitar for the female jack that is on most electric guitar's so you can plug in a cord. the pickup is wired to the female jack that is installed.
Only if the tuner has a built-in microphone, or if the acoustic guitar has a pickup which can be plugged into a tuner that only has an input jack instead of a microphone.
You can by an epiphone with one on already with the only additional cost of the value of of the P-90 with no installation. But yes you can install any pickup on any guitar, as long as your ok with drilling. I own a Gibson Jr so know a little about Juniors.
same as regular guitar, minus first and second strings. there are only 4 staff lines.
The rhythm player of AC/DC, Malcolm Young, plays on a heavily modified 1963 Gretsch Jet Firebird. He stripped the paint, removed the neck pickup and the third pickup he had installed, and rewired the controls so he only had the volume control.
~ The placement of pickups generate different sounds. The pickup closest to the neck (fretboard) will give you a deeper, bass sound. The pickup closest to the Bridge will give you a brighter, more treble of a sound. Electric Guitars have one to 3 pickups depending on the manufactures design and the tone they are trying to produce. Pickups also vary in sound depending on the construction of the pickup. The composite and size of the wire, along with the amount of turns (The full number of wraps around) produce a lighter or heavier sound. The potentiometers (volume and tone pots) used also have a tone quality to the over-all sound the pickup produces. ~ Pickup Switch Switch set to Treble, uses the pickup closest to the Bridge. While the switch set to Rhythm, uses the pickup closest to the neck. The switch should follow the direction of the placement of the pickups. Whether it's a 2 or 3 pickup guitar, the switch works from neck to bridge, controlling one or more of the pickups. 2 Pickup guitar ~ A Two pickup guitar will have a 3-way switch. The Rhythm position, up or towards the neck position, controls only the neck pickup. Moving the switch to the next position, middle, controls both the neck and bridge pickups. Moving the switch to the Treble position, down or towards the bridge, controls only the bridge pickup. 3 Pickup guitar ~ A Three pickup guitar should use a 5-way switch which works similar to the 3-way switch, except it allows the control of the middle pickup. The switch has 5 positions. Starting at the Bridge pickup, is position 1, (switch towards the bridge) the bridge pickup is the only pickup on , and working the neck pickup, is position 5, (switch is towards the neck) the neck pickup is the only one on. The 3rd position (switch is in the middle position) is working the middle pickup only, as it would be the only one on. Switch positions 2 an 4 work both pickups to either side. Position 2 works both the bridge and middle pickup, while position 4 works both the middle and neck pickup.
No its definatly allot easier to play, Its slightly easier because there are only 4 strings (some basses can have more)Its easy to pickup and play but there are some Techniques that can be hard but they are optional for playing.
you cannot install a game with two disks with only the first! all the data in on the second!
most usually there was a dealer kit that replaces the factory rear side storage box doors to install rear speakers , although only in xtra-cab pickups.
No licences are for one machine only