The "switch" on an Electric Guitar generally switches between the pickups, for different sounds.
Open up your amp and see if there is loose wiring on your on/off switch. If so, you can take a soldering iron and fix it. If that doesn't work, or that's not the problem, then you can take it in to a guitar shop for a replacement switch, which will only cost you around $10.
I'm pretty sure that means that it models other guitar sounds. Its probably a reference to something like a Line 6 Variax guitar - it is programmed to be able to switch between tons of different guitar sounds. Look it up on musicians friend website, go to guitar center and try it out (if they have it).
It would help alot if you learned some of the scales on the guitar and how they fit with the chords being played
yes! its an extremely universal case and that's what makes it great. I have one and i switch it out with my guitars when i need to transport them.
the fuse is in the amp case, take it to a tech. to have it repaired....
If you want to switch, then switch.
pickup selector switch
There is a power switch on the guitar
You switch the strings.
A Kill switch is on a guitar to stop/forward sounds of the guitar.
All electric guitars have this switch but it varies from guitar to guitar. it is called the pickup selector switch. It is used for deciding on which pickup to use on the guitar. On a les paul style guitar it can be used to select the neck (traditionally rythm pickup), bridge (traditionally used for lead) and both pickups together. =================== That's what it is on a normal Gibson Les Paul. But on a Gibson Les Paul BFG, that is a "kill" switch that turns the guitar off completely. On many Gretsches, the toggle switch is a tone switch flipping between bassier and more trebly sounds. On most Fenders, that switch is down on the lower bout by the volume/tone controls (but on a Telecaster Deluxe, the switch is where it'd be on a Les Paul). Then there are oddities like the Italia Rimini, which has no pickup selector switch -- just individual volume controls for the two pickups. Every guitar has a different design. You'd have to look into every model.
The Jazzmaster guitar typically uses three types of switches: a pickup selector switch, a rhythm/lead circuit switch, and a tone switch. The pickup selector switch allows you to choose between different pickups, the rhythm/lead circuit switch changes the tone of the guitar, and the tone switch adjusts the overall tone of the instrument.
If you mean the Guitar Hero III guitar then there are two switches on the back. The one just below the neck of the guitar (It looks like a quarter of a circle.) detaches the neck so you can store the guitar AND the neck in a smaller space, and the switch towards the side of the guitar detaches the faceplate so you can put a different faceplate on, or play without a faceplate.
Open up your amp and see if there is loose wiring on your on/off switch. If so, you can take a soldering iron and fix it. If that doesn't work, or that's not the problem, then you can take it in to a guitar shop for a replacement switch, which will only cost you around $10.
You can connect 2 guitars to 1 amp for a dual guitar setup by using a guitar splitter or an A/B switch pedal. These devices allow you to plug both guitars into the same amp and switch between them easily.
I don't think you can. The DS can't transfer stuff like that.
When choosing a guitar amp switch pedal, consider features like durability, compatibility with your amp, ease of use, number of channels, and any additional effects or customization options.