Hi There is no easy answer to this because it is a question of personal taste, but there are some ground rules, and the first is your style of music. If you are playing using only clean tones, perhaps for jazz or Mark Knopfler-style pickin, you would probably love the warmth of a pair of 12" speakers with alnico magnets. These are fairly low-powered when compared to a 12" with a regular ceramic magnet, and they will not really handle anything but the lightest bluesy grit, but for jazz they are awesome. Look for the name Jensen, but they must be alnico type, which means Ebay. If you are playing rock you probably want a standard 4x12 slant cabinet and there are more of these than you can shake a stick at, and they can go up in price to over 1000 dollars. When you consider you can buy the speakers in them for less than 100 bucks apiece (the 1000 dollar VHT cabinet is loaded with 4 12" Eminence Texas Heat speakers that you can buy for $75 bucks each!) Websites to look at for information include Marshall or Mesa for mid to upper price range, Behringer or Line 6 have a fairly decent offering at the low price range. The older (and obviously used) Peavey cabinets are also highly regarded. But if you go the Eminence or Celestion websites and look at the descriptions of literally dozens of the actual speakers (not the cabinets they come in) each with a different tone or focus you could spend forever and a small fortune loading a 4x12 with different speakers to find the "right" one. For what it's worth, my son bought a 600 dollar Marshall 4x12 loaded with Celestion G12-75s which he is replacing with the throatier Texas Heats. Your mileage will definitely vary. I suggest if you already own a guitar and amp that you take them to your local music store and try them with as many different boxes as you can. Phil
If you actually want someone other than just yourself to hear it, yes.
Electric guitars require an amplifier. Acoustic's will need a microphone and a speaker/amp if it is not acoustic/electric. Hope I answered your question well. Good Luck.
a speaker is a device for sending out sound. a woofer is a speaker designed for low bass sound a tweeter is a speaker designed for high treble sound
You are not guarenteed to get a great sound, but typically it is possible. A combo amp is just a cabinet and pre-amp/power-amp(head) in one box. If your combo has a line out that you can use to run speaker wire to the back of your speaker cabinet, then most likely it will work. The issue is, will your amp have enough juice to run the speaker cabinets with enough volume? For instance, my head is running 750w into a 4x12 at 4ohms. If were to run a 100w combo power-amp into the signal then I would likely have break up of signal and loss of sound clarity trying to get enough volume to be effective. If your combo has tons of extra juce, however, go for it!
Unfortunately, it depends. Speakers are the last part of the electric circuit, and as such, must compliment the amplifier head (in terms of power and resistance), the setup of your guitar(s), and the genre/style that you play (not to mention the venue). There are a multitude of reviews by speaker companies that try to be descriptive of the characteristics of the speaker tonality, but in the end, it comes down to price, preference, and power. I consider Eminence to be the middle of the road, and they offer a plethora of differing style to compliment many setups.
Two way speaker cabinets are cabinets that have no enclosed backing. If you place speakers in these type of cabinets, the sound will come out evenly on both sides of the cabinet since there's no backing.
Unless things have changed since they started, they use Jensen elements.
If wired in parallel then 4 ohms.
Many electronic stores sell bass speaker cabinets on their websites, however, the most popular website for such an item is Avatar Speakers. They offer made in the U.S.A. products and offer free shipping to the lower 48 states.
Electric energy is converted to sound energy in devices such as speakers and headphones. When an electric current passes through a coil of wire in the device, it creates a magnetic field that interacts with a permanent magnet, causing the coil to move back and forth. This movement of the coil creates vibrations in the air, which are interpreted by our ears as sound.
any wood that would last for a long time and that wont have a rough suface
Alexis Badmaieff has written: 'How to build speaker enclosures' -- subject(s): Loudspeaker cabinets
A magnet
A loudspeaker converts electric energy into sound energy using a vibrating diaphragm or cone. When an electric current passes through the speaker's voice coil, it creates a magnetic field that interacts with the permanent magnet inside the speaker, causing the voice coil to move back and forth rapidly. This motion pushes and pulls the diaphragm or cone, creating changes in air pressure that we perceive as sound.
Light bulbs are commonly used in speaker cabinets as protection devices. They absorb some of the power at certain frequencies that could otherwise damage the driver. They can be thought of as a simple but efficient fuse.
The attitude of the speaker can vary depending on their tone and choice of words, but it generally refers to their feelings or opinions toward the subject they are discussing. This can range from positive, neutral, or negative attitudes.
Any electronic staff offers speakers. It all depends on which type of speaker and what watt you need for it. I would suggest going into a store such as future shop and asking for their personally opinions.