A tighter string produces a higher pitched sound and a looser string produces a lower pitched sound
it changes the pitch, tighter strings produces higher pitch..
depending on the the individual gauges of the six (6) guitar strings ie: E, A, D, G, B, E, of course the guitar string that is long and loose produces the lowest pitch... A good example of this are the strings on a mandolin or a 'banduria' which has shorter strings compared to the strings on the guitar...because the mandolin/banduria strings are shorter and tighter, it produces higher pitch... "short and tight=higher pitch......long and loose=lower pitch"
The complete definition of an overtone is any frequency that is higher than the fundemental frequency of sound. When an overtone and a fundemental frequecy are together, this is called a partial.
Guitar has a higher pitch than a car horn.
When a capo is used on a guitar, it makes the overall pitch of the guitar higher as it effectively shortens the strings, meaning the note that is played has a higher pitch.
No.
the higher the q the sharper is the response however if drift occurs the it will be in-out because of it
Just as getting more money produces a higher rate of return, getting the money sooner also produces a higher rate of return.
Yes, as long as you have guitar hero 4 (world tour) or higher
Hahaa, that's a funny question. Which bass guitar and who is screaming? Generally speaking, the pitch range of the human voice is much higher than a bass guitar.
Well, the higher the number of megapixels, the sharper the picture, therefore better picture quality.
as far as i know its possible,but i wouldn't advise it,playing bass through an ordinary guitar amp can damage the speaker forever and damage the guitar too,bass amps are specificaly designed to deal with the lower frequencies that a bass guitar produces,playing though your hi-fi may damage the speakers forever or cause them to blow at higher volumes