Yes. Any electronic drum set can be connected to a standard stereo amplifier although it is not recommended. Standard speakers are not designed for electronic drums and they could damage your speakers if the volume and/or bass is set too high.
the reason for that is because if a battery is not connected to a wall it will not get additional energy for its high potential electrons. the reason for that is because if a batttery is not connected to a wall it is not getting additional energy for high potential electrons
Yes. Some amplifiers have a "Line Out" jack. However, it's also been said that the Line Out of an amplifier tends to sound like crap, because an amplifier's signal was meant to go through the speakers. For recording direct to a computer, you are probably better off using an amp modeller such as the Line 6 Pod.
Most factory radios are not set up to be connected to amps. You can try a few tricks to get you started though... 1.) If you have access to the wiring harness in the back of the radio, look for two RCA jacks (male or female), and an orange or blue wire (remote wire) that wouldn't be connected to anything except the radio. If you do have these, simple extensions can be purchased to run those wires to any aftermarket amplifier. 2.) If the car/truck came with a factory amplifier (you would know if it did), you can simply remove that amplifier and have full access to all wires needed for an aftermarket amplifier. 3.) If you were feeling up to the challenge, you can disassemble your radio and look for a pre-amp. After a few modifications, you can wire the aftermarket amplifier through the original pre-amp. 4.) Last but not least, most aftermarket amplifiers need only a few wires to get started. A power wire (RED - always hot), a remote wire (Most of the time a BLUE wire - only has power when the radio is on <<hook up to a toggle switch in this case>>), and your audio inputs. There are a few amps that do not require RCA inputs and you can simply split off an existing rear spear wire and tie in to the amplifier. If you need anymore assistance, feel free to email me SMHarris83@gmail.com
Anything that creates electrical sound (aka audio.) A piano is a sound generator but NOT an audio generator. An organ or keyboard is an audio generator and not a sound generator. These can also be thought of as signal oscillators in the 20-20k hz range which usually produce a constant signal or tone over a period of time. Sound is anything you can hear, and audio is anything you need an amplifier to hear.
Absolutely! Beware, however, that you will probably get unwanted feedback from the amplifier if you are using an electric/acoustic guitar. Acoustic amplifiers have circuitry built into them to help negate feedback.
Australia is not connected to anything it is surrounded by water.
All negative feedback systems, whether they be electronic, biological, or anything else, work by applying a negative feedback to the source signal, which is proportional in some way to the source signal. If the factor by which the amplifier corrects is high enough, oscillation will result (perhaps even runaway oscillation) How you make it happen depends upon the amplifier you use however -- though most work similarly enough. You could use a delay between output and feedback, or you could rely on a large amplifier gain.
Electronic repellers are not effective for anything long term.
his interests were anything electronic.
Anything Apple
Anything apple
anything connected to the cpu is a system resource
because it does not amplify anything, it transformers voltage and current. "amplifier" implies that input powe is increased at the output by increasing the voltage or current, or both. With a transformer, power in equals power out minus losses. The power "gain" of a transformer is always less than 1, if you want to think of it in amplifier terms.
There are wireless guitar 1/4 inch cables, which you simply connect at both sides like wireless microphones. Acoustic guitars are wireless, sort of, but since they don't use amplifiers anyway they shouldn't need wires. A wireless guitar that goes to an amplifier without plugging anything into the guitar might exist, but you would have to plug something in to the amplifier that connects to a transmitter built into the guitar's body, or something along those lines.
Anything connected to the computer is called a peripheral
Seriously? In just about anything electronic, in one form or another.
Yes, you can buy almost anything.