Ofcourse.
It will always sound like an acoustic guitar but the tone might b bad if u play it through an electric guitar amp. it would b better if u just buy an acoustic amp.
Absolutely. A guitar amp is designed to amplify the guitar and related frequencies and as a consequence, sounds nice with guitar. Vocals through a guitar amp sounds bad most the time, as does guitar straight into PA speakers.
yes, you can either put any kind of pickup in the guitar
Well, that matters. If it's an acoustic guitar, and no sound comes out, that could never happen. But if it's an electric guitar you're talking about,either the amps not on, the volume is not up on the guitar or amp, or the cord that leads from the amp to the guitar input jack is bad. You should be able to hear a slight noise from an electric guitar even with the amp malfunctioning or switched off, since the strings do make slight vibrations in airspace anyway. Perhaps they have their hand or arm muting the strings?
From my experience amp is bad cuz when i drank it i got diearea
for a fist amp its not bad but dont screw your subs over if you have good subs and a bad amp. go with hifonics or somthing good if willing to spend,
hi man if you have power going to the speakers like when you touch a battery to it, then your problem are most likely your transistors are bad which mean you should attempt to change or trow amp away.make sure if you decide to change take the exact number off it or try subsituties.
generally no, unless your amp has specific outputs for it... you might be able to rig it to work using cables and converter plugs, If your amp has a speaker extension output, but I seriously don't recommend trying it as I'm pretty sure that only leads to bad things happening... although Im not really to sure, althout its your amp, ears, and headphones your playing with here, not mine...
is it a tube amp? if it is then it could be where you plug it in. tube amps are very sensitive to power fluctuations. especially in older building, you can have your amp plugged in and then it will sound bad or different. this could be because the amount of electricity delivered to the outlet has changed and it has effected your amp's sound. what you could do is take an extension cord and plug your amp in somewhere else. solid state amps dont have that problem. also it could be because you blew your speaker(s). you should go to a guitar shop and ask a amp technician to check out your amp. hope this helps.
Of course you can. You can also put Fender strings on a Gibson. Nothing bad will happen. Just make any necessary truss rod adjustments if you are putting different gauge strings on a guitar.
Its not really bad for the guitar but if you want to take it off or you want to sell it or something like that i would not recommend it
Bad: strings buzz, bent neck, bad strings, etc. general bad guitar things