John Frusciante has used many different amp configurations over time, back in the early mothers milk era he used a mesa boogie strategy 400 stereo amp through mesa boogie cabinets before switching to a totally marshall setup around 1989-90 He used predominately JCM800 heads and Marshall JMP heads during this time. When recording blood sugar, he used a Marshall Major, JMP, JCM800, and a fender for some clean things. When frusciante came back from his "break" to record californication, he tried alot of new amps and toured for that album with a Marshall 200watt Major, A marshall Silver Jubilee 100watt, and a Fender Showman "blackface" head. After californication, Frusciante dropped the Fender Head and ever since he has used 2 Marshall Silver Jubilee Heads and his Marshall Major.
You DO NOT need an amplifier for a dj setup. Some speakers now come with a built in amp, known as a "POWERED SPEAKER".
I believe it is 100 Watt Two rock and a Fender.
Yes, According To What I've Read Online, EVH Used A Modified Amp Setup In Van Halen's Early Days, Which Apparently Gave Him More Power To Do What He Did Live. Information On This Should Be Found In Eddie Van Halen's Wikipedia Bio.
If you are using a guitar amp as a pre-amp to a bass amp (plugging your guitar into a guitar amp, and then patching the guitar amp to the bass amp), do not do this. Bass, acoustic guitar, and vocals (mics) are low impedence, where guitars are high impedence. You can very easily damage your equipment doing this sort of thing. If you are trying to get guitar sounds out of a bass amp, in my opinion, it's next to impossible. There is only one type of bass amp that I know of that you can accomplish this with...Ampeg has a series of bass amps with "switchable tweeters", meaning that they come equipped with tweeters, but you can turn them in order to use rig as a bass amp, and turn them on in order to play an acoustic guitar thru the bass amp. Since an acoustic guitar is low impedence, this works fairly well. You can also plug in an electric to this setup, even tho an electric guitar is high impedence...It's possible to plug in a high impedence instrument into a low impedence amp, but it's not advisable to plug in a low impedence instrument into a high impedence amp.
The RCA's from the amp will be arn to the CD player, then you need to connect the speaker's wire to the output + and - of the amp, this will cause the amp to have musical power from your radio, and the speakers to have the power from the amp..-Shocker
yes they can hit very hard if you have a good amp setup.
any amp could push any subs. but first off, rockford fosgate sucks. itll bump and be a good setup but sellt he amp and but sundown or american bass for amps
John Mccain.
You DO NOT need an amplifier for a dj setup. Some speakers now come with a built in amp, known as a "POWERED SPEAKER".
They dont use anyYou could just put a microphone underneath your setup and hook it up to a speaker.When dealing with an electronic drumset you would not want to use an guitar amp because the pitch range of a drumset is to high, a bass amp would be better, and a keyboard amp would be the second best. The best option is to get a specialized amp for drums.
I believe it is 100 Watt Two rock and a Fender.
I have two single voice coil, 4 ohm, 300W (rms) subs [Pioneer TS-W304C x 2] Connected to a 5 channel amp via the sub port which delivers 300W total (150W to each sub) The other 4 channels power my door speakers [Alpine PDX-5][Alpine SPS-610 x 2] I would like to change this setup and provide closer power to the subs RMS Wattage of 300W each. My main question is what amp/s would be suitable to power my subwoofers and how do i wire them? I'd also like to know performance contrasts between powering them from one mono amp, two mono amps and one 4 channel amp. And finally if im talking a bunch of nonsense and my current setup is fine please feel free to enlighten me!
roughly about a 2200 watt amp should do it, the fine print you dont read means you can push 800 passed the peak
Hi I use a Warwick - its an easy to use amp. Soundes great. I use a peavey 410 box. Its a exellent setup.
Yes, According To What I've Read Online, EVH Used A Modified Amp Setup In Van Halen's Early Days, Which Apparently Gave Him More Power To Do What He Did Live. Information On This Should Be Found In Eddie Van Halen's Wikipedia Bio.
The address of the John Bartram Association is: 54Th &Amp; Lindbergh Bl, Philadelphia, PA 19143
Yes you can definatly use these two together. The rms on the sub is 250 and the amp puts out 250 continuous power (RMS) at 4 ohms so yeh this setup should work no problem :)