- guitar goes to input
- ouput goes to amp
A guitar preamp is basically a guitar amplifier, but without the power amplifier section that drives the speaker. A typical guitar amplifier consists of two components: the preamp and the power amp. The preamp is responsible for generating most of the characteristics of the guitar tone. The power amp receives the output signal from the preamp, then raises it's level enough to drive a speaker so the guitar becomes audible. Physically, a guitar preamp can be an independent rack-mountable unit, a digital device (such as a Line6 POD), a floor pedal, or even circuitry inside the guitar itself.
Possibly. In my experience the bass will not work through a guitar amp?
you might need a guitar amp first
Guitar center
yes
It's probably feedback. When you play a note on your guitar, it's picked up by the pickups and amplified by the amp. If you're too close to the amp, the pickups will pick up the amplified sound and it will get amplified again and again. Try moving farther away from the amp. If that doesn't help, make sure all the electrical connections in your guitar are connected properly (double check the output jack.)
You need two guitar cables. One from the guitar to the pedal and then another from the pedal to the amp.
No
The low frequencies of the bass destroy a guitar amp , so use a bass amp.
The Behringer GMX210 True Analog Modeling 60W Guitar Amp ia a good starter amp.
Your speakers will blow out. A guitar amp is not meant to handle the low register of a bass. Even on a practice amp.
hahaha dude my amp does the same things. you just have radio interference, but mine does that when you hold a string on a fret.