| Depending on its design an electric guitar may have anything from one to six pickup elements. Classic (acoustic) guitars could also benefit...
| Depending on its design an electric guitar may have anything from one to six pickup elements. Classic (acoustic) guitars could also benefit...
| Guitar amplifiers using output devices such as the TDA7293 (100 W) or LM3886 (68 W) are surprisingly often damaged as a result of excessive...
| In September 2010 we published a digital multi-effects unit. This circuit can only be used with line level signals, such as those used by ke...
| The TDA7052A is a readily available amplifier chip (Farnell # 526198) that has a DC controlled volume input. Here, the IC is used as the var...
| Tubes (thermionic valves) have never departed from the amplified instrument scene and the majority of guitarists, including very young ones,...
| This design extends the basic sonic possibilities of an electric guitar without the use of any electronic effects. The expanded number of to...
| Many amateur music groups sing through an amp borrowed from a guitarist or bass player. This is where the technical problems arise in terms...
| To be able to play an electric guitar you need, in addition to the guitar itself, a guitar amplifier. The guitar then needs to be connected...
| The little speaker box without the amplifier you throw away. The speaker with the amplifier can be used as is; connect your guitar with an a...
| Electric guitars use coils (guitarists call them pickups or elements) to convert the vibrations of the strings into an electrical signal. Us...