Want this question answered?
That depends completely on where you set the volume knob on the amp.
Yes, you can plug an electric guitar into an acoustic amplifier. But I would suggest that you don't play at a high volume for a long period of time of the difference in impedence - an acoustic guitar (and bass and vocals) is low impedence, where an electric guitar (& keyboard) is high impedence.
It will sound thinner, you'll have less volume but it can be nice to achieve fenderish tones on a humbucking guitar.
An electric guitar
The difference between an electric guitar and an air guitar is a electric guitar is an actual guitar and an air guitar is imaginary. An air guitar is when people pretend to play a guitar with hand movements. An electric guitar converts vibrations of its steelcorded strings into electric current. These currents then go to a amplifier to make them louder.
to turn it up louder there should be a knob, but make sure that the guitars plugged in and the volume is up on that too.
The Guitar changes volume by how hard you strum it. If you are on an Electric Guitar you can control how loud it goes by adjusting a switch. On acoustic as well asstrummingit depends on where you strum it. If you strum it over the Hole in it. It will be louder than if you strummed it up the fret board.
take it to a guitar shop
There are several ways to increase the volume of an electric guitar. The two obvious ways would be to turn up the volume knob on the guitar itself, or turn up the master volume on your amp. If you have no master volume on your amp, use the post gain for the channel you are playing through. Other things also effect the volume of a guitar. Changing the pickups can effect the guitar's output, as can changing the pots, strings, etc. Also, depending on the pedals used, certain pedals can decrease the volume of the guitar being played, but a simple solution to that would be running your pedals through an effects loop.
a lot like a normal acoustic guitar, but with more options on volume.
That depends completely on where you set the volume knob on the amp.
you don't have to plug it in to play.
Yes, you can plug an electric guitar into an acoustic amplifier. But I would suggest that you don't play at a high volume for a long period of time of the difference in impedence - an acoustic guitar (and bass and vocals) is low impedence, where an electric guitar (& keyboard) is high impedence.
Electric GuitarI am doing a report on electric guitars for sience, and i want to know how the electric guitar changed man kind. could you please help me.Sincerly, a vandy student
It will sound thinner, you'll have less volume but it can be nice to achieve fenderish tones on a humbucking guitar.
depends on the amplifier settings for electric vs acoustic. if neither guitar has any electricity going through it to the untrained ear all you will hear is a subtle difference in volume with an electric guitar plugged in and distortion more aggressive and fuzzy I guess would be a good way to put it.
An electric guitar