Don't know too much about amps, but fuses generally blow to protect equipment. A large surge of power can cause this or if the wrong size is replaced. DO NOT go with a larger fuse. You could kill your equipment forever or start a fire. Call the company that makes your 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.
Never use any bass with any guitar amp. Guitar amps are not meant to handle the lower register of a bass, and the speakers on your guitar amp will blow out if you try to play a bass through them.
They can plug in and work, but most guitar amps aren't built to give a solid bass output, so sound will be fuzzy/ weak. Best bet is to just get a small bass amp. A 15w Fender Rumble amp is about $150 and sounds great for home practice.
yes, you can either put any kind of pickup in the guitar
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.
radio broke see car dealer
Never use any bass with any guitar amp. Guitar amps are not meant to handle the lower register of a bass, and the speakers on your guitar amp will blow out if you try to play a bass through them.
I believe that it's either a 10 amp fuse or 20 amp. Check your fuses out. It should tell you.
Yes, but it may blow if the load draws more than 10 amps.
check fuses to see if any are broken and replace with proper amp
The amp will have probably a mains fuse on the power input circuit and other fuses on the dc power supplies to the circuits. There might also be fuses on the audio output circuits. The fuses will be in conventional holders. You have to find the fuses, take them out and look at them. In a good fuse you can often see the thin wire running through inside, and if the fuse has blow you can see the damaged wire. Then having identified the faulty fuse you can look on the internet for a replacement of the right voltage and current.
Possibly. In my experience the bass will not work through a guitar amp?
Of course. You will not get that "in your face" low end sound, and if you crank up the volume, you can blow a speaker out, but if you're sensible about it, it should work fine.
you might need a guitar amp first
Possibly a short in the wiring, or the compressor may be stuck causing the fuses to blow
They can plug in and work, but most guitar amps aren't built to give a solid bass output, so sound will be fuzzy/ weak. Best bet is to just get a small bass amp. A 15w Fender Rumble amp is about $150 and sounds great for home practice.