ok. your either not pressing hard enough on your strings,,,,or too close too the frets.....or your guitar needs a touch up... cuz your strings are too close too the neck if its a electric... on the bridge there should be some really tiny screws... tighten them...that wil raise your strings higher. or you can take it to a guitar shop or a proffessional
A passive sub-woofer does work when plugged in to an amplifier. In an active sub-woofer ("powered") the amplifier is built in.
If buzzing occours when connecting a guitar to any pedal or amplifier, it signifies there is a loose connection somewhere in the signal flow. You can fault-find it by taking each 1/4 inch jack in turn, plugging one end into the amplifier (with the volume turned up) and tapping the other end. If the lead is working, you should hear a buzzing each time your finger touches the jack. If this does not happen with any of your leads, the problem is most likely with your amplifier (either that or ALL of your jacks are broken). If this works with each of your jacks, try swapping the guitar and seeing if you can get a signal. If you still cannot get a signal, the problem lies with your pedal and you should phone the technical support number given in the pedals instruction manual, or return it to the shop you purchased it from.
when the guitar players play any kind of guitar as you can see there close to a micro phone which projects soundBaYmArFor electric guitars:They make wireless transmitters that plug into the guitar and it sends the signal to a reviver that is plugged into the amplifier.
through George Beauchamps invention called the single coil pickup and plugged into an amplifier.
When you pluck a string on an electric guitar that is plugged in to an amplifier, the pick-ups underneath the strings "hear" the sound, and send it through to the amplifier, projecting the sound of the string plucked.
A passive sub-woofer does work when plugged in to an amplifier. In an active sub-woofer ("powered") the amplifier is built in.
Yes.
Without being plugged into an amplifier, a solid-body guitar cannot be heard further than 10 or 12 feet. The amplifier makes the guitar electronics sound loud enough to be heard by others . . . sometimes even too loud for others.
There is a problem with headphone jack or amplifier of your audio player or the Control Talk feature of the headphones that allow them to be used as a microphone on iPhones. And sometimes when your laptop is plugged to its charger- it does the same thing.
Yes. An acoustic-electric guitar plugs into an amplifier the same way a regular electric guitar does.
If buzzing occours when connecting a guitar to any pedal or amplifier, it signifies there is a loose connection somewhere in the signal flow. You can fault-find it by taking each 1/4 inch jack in turn, plugging one end into the amplifier (with the volume turned up) and tapping the other end. If the lead is working, you should hear a buzzing each time your finger touches the jack. If this does not happen with any of your leads, the problem is most likely with your amplifier (either that or ALL of your jacks are broken). If this works with each of your jacks, try swapping the guitar and seeing if you can get a signal. If you still cannot get a signal, the problem lies with your pedal and you should phone the technical support number given in the pedals instruction manual, or return it to the shop you purchased it from.
when the guitar players play any kind of guitar as you can see there close to a micro phone which projects soundBaYmArFor electric guitars:They make wireless transmitters that plug into the guitar and it sends the signal to a reviver that is plugged into the amplifier.
Normally a guitar is considered 'acoustic' if it requires no amplification ie you don't have to plug it in to anything to be heard. This means its body is hollow which allows the sound to reverberate when the strings are struck. An obvious example is a classical guitar. An 'electric' guitar usually has a solid body and to be heard properly, needs to be plugged into an amplifier. With an electric guitar it's the pickups under the strings that capture the string vibrations, turn them into electrical signal which then get amplified to produce the sound. Gibson Les Paul and Fender Stratocaster are examples of electric guitars. There are hybrids though: electro-acoustic guitars look like normal acoustic guitars but thay can also be plugged into an amplifier to produce a louder sound. With these, the sound is produced by the hollow body and by a special pickup (piezo) - typically located in the bridge (where the strings are anchored to the guitar's body)
through George Beauchamps invention called the single coil pickup and plugged into an amplifier.
An active antenna is powered antenna, this includes a RF amplifier and a power supply so it must be "plugged in" somewhere. A standard "passive" antenna has no amplifier.
Not quite sure what your asking, If its buzzing because the jack is the problem then you probably need to re solder the wires in either the guitar or the cord, if its the cord it would be easier to just buy a new cord. If its buzzing when the guitar isn't plugged into the amp the try adjusting the truss rod.
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.