amp or amplifier
you hit the strings , they vibrate the vibrations are picked up by the guitar "pickups" the pickups transfer the information to the amplifier and out of the amplifier comes the sound without an amplifier you got a really fancy and quiet acoustic guitar.
A tube guitar amplifier basically is a large speaker which contains tubes inside the amplifier box for guitar use. Some are vintage and some are classic.
The ones at end of a guitar (on the headstock) are called tuners, tuning pegs or tuning posts. The ones on the front of the body are the control pots/knobs (volume, tone).
Push the "Effects" knob on your amp to enter edit mode. Turn down the knobs labeled, "feedback", "Level", and "Level" (There are two "level" knobs). Press the edit knob again to exit the editing mode. You should have no more delay (and reverb).
Amp Repair Parts, Ali Express and Guitar Nucleus are great guitar stores to check out to find the necessary amplifier part needed for your musical instrument.
Either effect pedals, the knobs on the bass itself, of the bass-mid-treble controls on the amplifier
u can go to see and check on wikipedia...there is a page for guitar amplifier..
A combo amplifier for a guitar contains a normal guitar amplifier and one to four speakers. A normal guitar amplifier does not contain speakers, but is able to send the signal to a speaker cabinet.
Yes
There are two knobs on a guitar. One is the tone knob, which is used when tuning the guitar right pitch and sound you want out of the guitar. The other is for your volume, which is obviously used to toggle between the loudness or quietness of the guitar.
For an electric guitar you definitely need an amplifier because the guitar on its own is pretty quiet. If you play an acoustic guitar you can use an amplifier to make your guitar louder and more hearable but you don't have to in order to record it.
Yes. An acoustic-electric guitar plugs into an amplifier the same way a regular electric guitar does.
The benefits of an electric guitar amplifier are the increased energy content to the signal the guitar produces and the available tone controls. The amplifier is a staple of guitarists for those reasons.
I believe that an amplifier is something to plug your guitar into.
It is a guitar that is fitted with Pic-ups these are used to capture the sound from the strings and relay it via and amplifier/speaker, to connect the guitar to the amplifier/speaker you use a guitar lead.
3 things in different ways of thinking... first is your picking and fretting hands, you control the speed and notes you play second is your amplifier and or effects pedals as they control the sound third and final thing is the knobs on the guitar