It usually changes the tonal character of an amp. On cheaper amps it's mostly about the change of frequencies in the mid range or distortion, on more quality amps it might switch to an entirely different preamp circuitry. All in all, you'll always feel the difference.
You need two guitar cables. One from the guitar to the pedal and then another from the pedal to the 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.
A regular guitar amplifier is generally just the amp head itself (no speaker box), while a combo amp contains the amplifier and the speaker all in one containment box.
Depends if you have a good guitar or not, if not get a guitar if you do get an amp and just buy a new guitar when your current one is not worth having anymore :)
Yes, unless it is a USB guitar.
No, a guitar amp is designed to amplify the signal from a guitar, not a microphone. Using a microphone with a guitar amp can damage both the microphone and the amp.
There is usually a button or switch on the amp which turns distortion on and off.
Possibly. In my experience the bass will not work through a guitar amp?
you might need a guitar amp first
The main difference between a guitar amp and a bass amp is that a bass amp is designed to handle the lower frequencies produced by a bass guitar, while a guitar amp is optimized for the higher frequencies of a regular guitar. This means that a bass amp typically has a larger speaker and more power to accurately reproduce the deep tones of a bass guitar.
If you are referring to "wireless", than you must first buy a wireless receiver that hooks into your amplifier, and your guitar, and transmits a signal from the guitar to the amp... SongScouting: or just buy a pickup microphone. Dean Markley makes one that is a wooden bar that goes across your soundhole, or there is a "button" type that sticks (with putty) to your bridge.
The main difference between a bass amp and a guitar amp is that a bass amp is designed to handle the lower frequencies produced by a bass guitar, while a guitar amp is tailored to amplify the higher frequencies of a regular guitar. The construction and components of each amp are optimized to enhance the unique sound characteristics of their respective instruments.
Guitar center
yes
There could be several reasons why your guitar is not playing through the amp. Check if the cables are properly connected, the volume on the guitar and amp is turned up, the amp is powered on, and the settings on the amp are correct. If everything seems fine, there may be an issue with the guitar, amp, or cables that require further troubleshooting or repair.
No
You need two guitar cables. One from the guitar to the pedal and then another from the pedal to the amp.