Wednesday, October 12, 2011

ESP Guitars - EX, EX Diamond Plate & FX

http://bit.ly/p68Udl


ESP Guitars is proud to announced 12 new models to be released this fall 2009. The new Standard Series models include some juicy updates to the Eclipse, EX, and V lines, plus two new 7-string guitars and a whole new body style for ESP: the Phoenix-II. Click the hyperlink to view pictures and the specs of each new Standard Series ESP guitar models. p://gear-vault.com/esp-guitars-phoenix-ii-phoenix-ii-bass" title="ESP Guitars Phoenix-II & Bass" rel="dofollow">Phoenix-II. Click the hyperlink to view pictures and the specs of each new Standard Series ESP guitar models.

EX, EX Diamond Plate & FX
The ESP EX/EXP models have been the source of some great music in the past. Down through its development, this model has been the favorite of many great players including James Hetfield of Metallica. Well it’s time to bring the EX back into the ESP family! The new ESP EX comes in the classic 24.75” scale and features a mahogany body, maple neck and rosewood fretboard and EMG 81 and 60 pickups. Black nickel Gotoh tuners and bridge look sweet on the black finish.

Now, take that same guitar, beef it up with an anodized aluminum diamondplate body shield and you have the EX Diamond Plate! This guitar is so metal, it’s actually made from metal…at least the top, anyway.

If you’re into the EX shape and a natural finish, check out the ESP FX. It’s a natural mahogany-finished guitar in the EX body style, with the headstock shape from our F series. It features Sperzel locking tuners, a Gotoh bridge, and those amazing EMG 81/60 active pickups.

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EX



ESP Guitars EX



Spec:



  • Set-Neck


  • 24.75” Scale


  • Mahogany Body


  • Maple Neck


  • Rosewood Fingerboard


  • 42mm Bone Nut


  • Thin U Neck Contour


  • 22 XJ Frets


  • Black Nickel Hardware


  • Gotoh Tuners


  • Gotoh TOM Bridge & Tail


  • EMG 81 (B) / 60 (N) Active p.u.


  • Finish: SW, BLK


EX Diamond Plate



ESP Guitars EX Diamond Plate



Spec:



  • Set-Neck


  • 24.75” Scale


  • Mahogany Body


  • Maple Neck


  • Rosewood Fingerboard


  • 42mm Bone Nut


  • Thin U Neck Contour


  • 22 XJ Frets


  • Black Nickel Hardware


  • Gotoh Tuners


  • Gotoh TOM Bridge & Tail


  • EMG 81 (B) / 60 (N) Active p.u.


  • Finish: BLK w/Diamond Plate


FX



ESP Guitars FX



Spec:



  • Set-Neck


  • 24.75” Scale


  • Mahogany Body


  • Mahogany Neck


  • Rosewood Fingerboard


  • 42mm Bone Nut


  • Thin U Neck Contour


  • 22 XJ Frets


  • Black Nickel Hardware


  • Sperzel Locking Tuners


  • Gotoh TOM Bridge & Tail


  • EMG 81 (B) / 60 (N) Active p.u.


  • Finish: PBS (Padauk Brown Satin)
@box @expono @evernote @facebook @flickr @friendfeed @hi5 @hyves @jaiku @myspace @orkut @picasa @smugmug @sonico @soundcloud @sugarsync @tinypic @wordpress @yahoo @zooomr

How to choose a kids guitar

http://bit.ly/ kids-guitar-guitar-review-childrens-guitarsMost of us readers at Gear Vault remember what age we started playing guitar and what kind of guitar we played. But many parents are stumped on which kids guitar to get their youngster. Rather then buy your child the ever so popular 'Guitar Hero' TV game system, why not persuade them to play the most popular American instrument, the guitar. Hopefully this article will shred light on a difficult decision on which kids guitar to purchase.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Electric Guitar Technology

http://bit.ly/mQZLNZ Guitar TechnologyGuitarists have at all times had an like crazy-and-down relationship with the concept of big technology. Perhaps it is because of the elemental nature of our musicial instrument, significantly in its acoustic form, or maybe its because of the uncooked and often emotional method taken by many of the creators and ongoing purveyors of jam, blues, country, and different types of songs. Regardless of the case, there will always be my large a part of the guitar community that likes to keep things simple and will get it executed with my pretty conventional electric guitar, my valve amp, and a couple pedals. This is a methodology that has labored for a lot artists, given up fine sounds, and been a part of my complete bunch of music that consist of on a whole bunch of iPods all over the world.

Its not, however, the only option to fly. There may be my small however seen minority in our scene of musicians for who easy is simply not enough. There are pickers out there who simply hear things in a completely different approach than the remainder of usa. They’re interested in effects processing, looping, MIDI, guitar synthesis, and other ways to get acoustic guitars to do issues not ever imagined by Leo, Orville, and Epi. People like Adrian Belew, The Edge, and Matthew Bellamy of the band Muse have made guitar technology and processing my building block of their sounds and make songs that has little to do with the old ‘valves, tweed, and custom’ method of doing things.

The query before us right this moment, gentle readers, is how do you, the readers of Gear Vault, really feel about big-tech guitar playing? There are a lot innovations, gadgets, and pieces of equipment that consist of doing their best to change the state of the electric guitar farther ahead than it currently is, no less than as practiced by the majority of players out there. One of the a lot seen (and many quickly rejected by the market) items of guitar tech is the now-notorious Gibson Robot Guitar that strings and tunes with automated technology. The ‘Robot’ idea was instantly beat to demise on-line and in print by the lions’ share of the guitar world for being, well, ridiculous. There consist of most different bits of tech that guitarists can dabble in, ought to they choose to. One of many many obvious and ‘typical’ is the Fender Roland-Ready Stratocaster, which is my guitar-primarily based MIDI controller that makes it easy for a electric guitar guitarist to edge into the kind of machine knob often left to keyboardists. Fender guitars also launched the VG Stratocaster that packs digital modeling expertise onboard and allows one electric guitar to cop the sounds of a lot completely different axes, tunings, and the like. These are modern instruments, to make sure, but consist of back a little methods from the reducing edge of the tech factor and could be understood and played by many of guitarists without too much of my studying curve.

Alternatively, some truly all-new input excited about the electric guitar will be evidenced back in the string-much less, contact pad guitar being prototyped by Misa Digital. This plank has 24 frets, a multi-perform contact pad on the body, and is answered to emulate guitar tones and to provide what Misa calls my ‘perfect signal.’ That signal can then be digitally morphed into something it must sound like and even permits totally different effects to be utilized on a observe-by-be aware basis. That is said to eliminate the need for any kind of external effects and processing gear in an effort to make guitar playing others ‘efficient.’ That is the sort of electric guitar that is actually not for everyone and would in all probability take a good bit of time to get a handle on and discover my voice with.

The thing we at Gear Vault want to realize is whether or not the sort of electric guitar tech is attractive to all of you on the market in Electric guitar Town and what you'll do with it in your personal playing and rig. Some folks won’t be interested on this at all and remain staunch traditionalists. Some, however, will see these items and feel like they only pulled the sword from the stone, southernto speak. Where does every of you fall on this curve? Inquiring minds wish to recognize. Should you consist of, certainly, a high tech visionary, send american most hyperlinks southernwe are able to see what you do. Bear in mind: all of the stuff we see as old school now was innovative fashionable in its day. Should you consist of advancing the electric guitar in some means or just have strong feelings about the entire thought, drop us a line and get the dialogue developed. Watch this space for the good stuff we get. Till it begins rolling into the home workplace, although, I'm going to go fireplace like crazy my coal-burning Telecaster and plug it into my mule-driven amp for a fast blast through 2112. Somebody has to maintain it actual… @box @expono @evernote @facebook @flickr @friendfeed @hi5 @hyves @jaiku @myspace @orkut @picasa @smugmug @sonico @soundcloud @sugarsync @tinypic @wordpress @yahoo @zooomr electric guitars guitar tech education instruments

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Egnater Rebel-30 Guitar Amplifier Hands-On Review - How Does She Sound?

Guitar Amplifier Reviews
Born and raised in Detroit, Michigan, Egnater grew up learning guitar with the music of the local bands of his era, including Alice Cooper, Grand Funk Railroad and Bob Seger. His frustration at not being able to find an amp that did what he wanted it to led to Bruce designing and building one of the first cascaded gain lead channel guitar amps.

Ever since then, for three and a half decades, he's run his own custom amplification shop and worked with some of the world's top players, including Kirk Hammett, Steve Vai and Dimebag Darrell, as well as Randall and Rocktron.

Besides licensing his modular concept to Randall for the MTS series, Egnater hand-builds his own custom amps in Berkeley, Michigan and also has a range of Chinese-made products – including the Rebel 30 head and 1x12 combo.

It may be a Rebel, but it's a smartly dressed one, with a suit of two-tone cream and black vinyl that's much thicker than we're used to seeing on Chinese products. The Rebel 30's cabinet is compact and deeper than you'd expect, making it very nearly a cube, but is easy to carry single-handed.

The electronics are contained inside a tough 'L'-shaped steel chassis, mostly on two large high quality printed circuit boards, one mounted vertically for the preamp stuff and one mounted horizontally for the output stage. These hold nearly everything, including the valve bases – the output valves hang upside down from the bottom of the chassis, while the four preamp valves are mounted horizontally and accessed through a removable grille, nearer to the top of the cabinet.

The colour scheme carries on to the control panel, where the Egnater's boutique guitar amplifier heritage becomes clear. Channel one, the clean channel, features volume, bass and treble; channel two handles overdrive with a familiar layout of gain, master volume and three-band EQ.

Both channels feature sub-miniature toggle switches to operate Egnater's 'bright' and 'tight' functions, making it easy to add a little extra snap to a Les Paul or girth to the low-end of a Stratocaster or Telecaster.

Now for the cool stuff: both channels have separate attenuator controls, varying the amp's output from a maximum of 30 watts down to just one watt. The Rebel 30's trick output stage features a pair of EL84s and a pair of 6V6s, which are linked to a front panel detented mix control that lets you fade from one pair to the other, with both pairs on in the centre position.

At either extreme you get about 20 watts, going up to around 30 with all four valves working. "I came up with the idea for that while I was stuck in an airport waiting for a flight," explains Egnater over a crackly trans-Atlantic phone line. "There are lots of amps with more than one type of output valve and I wanted to do that, but in a different way. As far as I know nobody else has that mix control, and the cool thing is it really works – you can really hear the change as you fade from the EL84s to the 6V6s and back again".

Next to the mix control is the standby switch, which has a third position for silent recording. This mutes the custom Celestion Egnater Elite 80 loudspeaker, but leaves the rear panel recording output active. This is balanced and speaker compensated, for an authentic straight-to-tape (or disk) amplified tone.

Other rear panel features include external speaker jacks, a socket for the two-button footswitch, switchable impedance and mains voltage (carefully protected under a screw-down cover) and separate channel level controls for the Rebel 30's digital reverb.

One minor annoyance: the reverb controls are laid out the opposite way round to the channels. If you lean over the front of the amp to adjust them, the reverb level knob for channel one is nearest the panel controls for channel two, and vice versa.

But that's pretty much the only thing we could find to grumble about here. The Rebel 30 has excellent build quality, tantalising features and plenty of that very rare commodity the Americans can do so well: style. As if to make sure we get the point, there's also a padded cover embroidered with the Egnater logo and a well-written informative manual printed on luxury paper.

"If you go to a Chinese factory and tell them you want something quick and cheap, you'll often get what you deserve," says Bruce. "We've worked tirelessly with our partners in China to raise the bar for quality. We're on the phone talking to them every day and make frequent visits to the factory to keep on top of things. I'm very proud of what we've achieved and I think the results speak for themselves".

Sounds

We tried the Rebel out with our two regular test guitars: a Strat fitted with regular output Duncan Alnico Pro II single-coils, and a vintage Paul Reed Smith CE bolt-on loaded with HFS and Vintage humbuckers.

The Egnater's clean channel is rich, responsive and warm, with an extended glassy treble and nicely contoured lows that are easy to whip into shape with the bright and tight switches.

We never noticed the lack of a mid-range control – bass and treble interact smoothly and make it easy to get stunning clean sounds, enhanced by the smooth digital reverb, which tails off naturally as you switch between channels, despite level changes – something that Egnater calls 'spillover'.

As you turn up the volume a little more, the clean channel develops a subtle edge that's highly rewarding for big chords. The lead channel is quick and easy to dial-in and the gain control has plenty of mild overdrive range, with all the monster distortion happening in the last quarter of this knob's travel.

Egnater's signature hot lead tone is great fun, with a vocal sustain and harmonic squeals exploding off the attack of every note. "That edge on the clean channel is deliberate and something a lot of players like," says Bruce. "The lead channel has the classic Egnater tone – over the years I've learnt a lot of tricks and they help to define a character that folks will hopefully recognize."

At higher volume levels, the attenuator controls make it easy to add just the right amount of power amp drive, while being able to fade from the boxier mids of EL84s to the fatter bass and airy treble of the 6V6s is a revelation. There's so much colour to be had from these two features you may never get around to using the tone controls.

With the attenuator (on the guitar amplifiers) down on the one-watt setting you can get some pretty vicious distortion from the clean channel, but it works better the other way around – we had the lead channel's attenuator on about one quarter and the clean channel's all the way up.

At higher volume levels the Egnater Rebel 30 sounds much fatter and benefits from the purer tone of single-coils, while at low-to-medium volumes it's humbuckers that win. It's loud and easily copes with an unmic'd drum kit, with very little of the boxiness normally associated with small combos.

This is one of the best Chinese-made amps we've ever seen, with build quality, electronics, high-end design and sheer tone that far exceeds many Western-built products. It isn't the cheapest 'offshore' 30-watt amp you can buy, but you're getting what you pay for and then some, as there are many combos costing from $700- $1500 that can't touch the Egnater for tone and response.

The Rebel 30 is one of those rare amplifier designs that simply cannot be made to sound bad, no matter how hard you try. Easily portable, capable of turning out great results in the studio and small to medium gigs, it's already a major hit in the USA and we think that it's destined for great things over here too. If your bag includes rock, blues and fusion, then this amp probably has your name on it… as well as Bruce Egnater's, of course!

Verdict

One of the best small combos in its class - add the 1x12 extension cab and you've got a killer rig that's highly portable and versatile.

 @box @expono @evernote @facebook @flickr @friendfeed @hi5 @hyves @jaiku @myspace @orkut @picasa @smugmug @sonico @soundcloud @sugarsync @tinypic @wordpress @yahoo @zooomr Egnater Guitar Amplifiers

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Epiphone Wilshire Phant-O-Matic Guitar Giveaway

http://bit.ly/racpnY Guitar Giveaways

Musician`s Friend are giving away one of the My Chemical Romance`s Frank Iero`s signature Epiphone Wilshire Phant-O-Matic. A fantastic and brand new model in Epiphone catalogue which is sure to strike the right chord with all guitar enthusiasts. The poll can be entered at Musician`s Friend`s official web page. The propositions are that one person may enter once a day. It lasts until October the 31st. The lucky winner will be chosen around November the 4th.

Epiphone Wilshire Phant-O-Matic is codesigned with My Chemical Romance`s guitarist Frank Iero and aesthetically, this guitar delivers all the sweet vintage features which made Wilshire models iconic guitars in the history of rock music.

Epiphone guitars made this one a very special guitar with unsurpassed tonal versatility which comes in the shape of Varitone system. It uses a six position rotary switch which when turned to any position from two to six morphs the guitar tone accordingly to how far from position one it is. Position one is a total bypass of the Varitone system. two to four reshape the sound, but keep the clarity of the sound, but positions five and six turn the sound of the classical Alnico pickups into single coil sound, but without a usual single coil "quack". When combined with a three way toggle and a killswitch on the upper horn of the double cutaway it adds up to limitless tonal possibilities.

Epiphone Wilshire Phant-O-Matic comes with a solid double cutaway mahogany body combined with a glued neck. Epiphone guitar's own Lock-Tone variant of the Tune-O-Matic bridge with a stoptail is used for this beauty. It makes absolute stability a standard feature. Alnico Classic pickups in the bridge and neck position give it all from the sweet and mellow clean tones to lion roars and everything in between. Control department consists of a master volume knob, varitone switch and a killswitch. Pickup switch is a three way toggle standard. Mahogany glued neck has 1960s Slim Taper shape which makes it easy and very comfortable to play for hours without any feeling of fatigue. rosewood fingerboard features 22 medium jumbo frets and Mother-Of-Pearl Block inlays. Other features include: 24-3/4" scale, 12" fingerboard radius, 1-11/16" nut width, nickel hardware, Wilkindon tuners and a black pickguard. Available in Antique Ivory.

Epiphone Wilshire Phant-O-Matic is a true beauty and a hard worker as well. The tonal versatility blended with vintage features and looks make this one a killer. Check Epiphone Wilshire Phant-O-Matic at our detail page or at Musician`s friend official web page.

guitar giveaways @box @expono @evernote @facebook @flickr @friendfeed @hi5 @hyves @jaiku @myspace @orkut @picasa @smugmug @sonico @soundcloud @sugarsync @tinypic @wordpress @yahoo @zooomr electric guitars epiphone guitars giveaway

Friday, October 7, 2011

Roland Jupiter-80 Synthesizer Review

http://bit.ly/noBA9o Roland Jupiter-80 KeyboardOne of the hottest and most talked about products on the market today is the Roland Jupiter-80. This is not a re-creation of the ‘80s Jupiter-o, although it does pay homage to its predecessor with road-proven hardware and massive sound. This is a modern synth that features Roland’s SuperNATURAL synthesis engine. The SuperNATURAL engine is designed to re-create legendary vintage synth sounds and amazingly realistic organic acoustic sounds.

The Roland Jupiter-80 is an envelope-pushing synth with three separately programmable sound chains. Each sound chain has a filter, an oscillator, an LFO, and an amp, and you can combine up to nine sound chains for an amazing 27 oscillators – at once! Each oscillator can utilize one of seven vintage waveforms or one of over 350 PCM waveforms for unlimited tone-shaping combinations. The Jupiter-80 supports up to 256 polyphonic voices depending on the sound load. Also featured is an extremely powerful arpeggiator with 128 factory presets and another 128 presets that are user definable. And musicians will love that this board includes Roland’s famous SuperNATURAL pianos, brass, strings, and more.

The Jupiter-80 was designed and laid out for live performance. A large LCD screen makes navigating the functions of the Jupiter-80 a breeze. After you have designed your own patches, you can save them as “Live Sets.” A Live Set can stack up to four sounds, each with its own DSP, effects group, and level control!

There are a number of assignable knobs and buttons on the Jupiter-80, so you can create a custom layout. Roland’s D Beam controller can be assigned to control parameters for a more dynamic performance. Control volume, Leslie speed, modulation depth, and more, all with your hand.

The USB port built into the Jupiter-80 allows you to easily record your creative musical ideas. It can also be used to provide backing tracks to play along with. Plus, you can save your Jupiter-80 settings to a USB key for recall and backup. Plug the keyboard into your computer and record directly to your DAW via USB MIDI.

Roland’s Jupiter-80 features hundreds of amazing presets, a 76-key semi-weighted synth keyboard, stellar effects, cool arpeggiators, ultra-realistic SuperNATUAL instruments and sounds, and much more. Great in the studio or live onstage, the Roland Jupiter-80 is a force to be reckoned with. Source: Sweetwater @box @expono @evernote @facebook @flickr @friendfeed @hi5 @hyves @jaiku @myspace @orkut @picasa @smugmug @sonico @soundcloud @sugarsync @tinypic @wordpress @yahoo @zooomr instruments keyboard

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

GuitarGrip Guitar Hanger

http://bit.ly/q9DhyK GuitarGrip Guitar HangerGrip Studios produce a range of different hand-shaped guitar hangers from factory made models to elegantly hand-carved and hand-painted artist originals. I was sent their gorgeous ‘Grip Reaper’ design which features a glossy skeleton hand finish.

What’s In the Box?

Out of the box you are immediately struck by the detail in the model as all of the little lines and creases are present and accounted for and the hand features some impressive skeleton hand. I’m not sure what these are made from but there’s certainly a good weight behind them, they feel very solidly made and are certainly up to the task of holding up a guitar.

The hanger is fixed to the wall by a single long screw and has some black felt padding at the base of the screw to protect your wall from damage. I did find that there was some slight transfer of black dye onto my wall after I took the hand down, but nothing that won’t wash off. The part of the hanger which will come into contact with your guitar is covered in a very soft black rubber coating to prevent any damage to your guitar’s finish.

Did you also notice that the model is left handed? Grip Studios have also recently introduced right handed models if you would like a set.

Installation

Installation is ridiculously simple as all you really need to do is screw it into your wall. Because of the single screw design it is obviously preferable to find a stud in your wall to affix the hanger, but through the use of the proper wall anchors you could virtually attach this anywhere. The only tool you will need is a drill with a 3/16” bit to make the starter hole.

In Use

Once on the wall I gave the GuitarGrip hanger some fairly hefty abuse to make sure it would stand up to the job at hand – it wasn’t going anywhere, a good start! It almost seemed a shame to cover this up with a guitar as it really looks like a wicked piece of art on display.

The hand holds your guitar perfectly straight and a good 3-4 inches away from the wall. For guitars with a non-symmetrical headstock design it’s just a case of twisting the hanger until your guitar hangs straight. All of my guitars fit like a glove, however it’s probably worth noting that the 7-string guitars and classical were a fairly tight fit.

As expected, the only part of the guitar which comes into contact with the hanger is well protected by the rubber padding. It is also easy to insert and remove your guitar without hitting your neck against any of the unpadded fingers.

The Grip Studios hanger looks great on my wall and I can only imagine that having a whole team of them holding up all of my guitars would look the absolute business.

Conclusions

These went down a complete storm – all my friends are asking where to get them and my dad, who doesn’t even play guitar, is hell-bent on taking this one home to hang his coats on. It does the job perfectly and looks fantastic up on my wall – recommended! Get your guitars off the floor and into safe hands. @box @expono @evernote @facebook @flickr @friendfeed @hi5 @hyves @jaiku @myspace @orkut @picasa @smugmug @sonico @soundcloud @sugarsync @tinypic @wordpress @yahoo @zooomr accessories

Monday, October 3, 2011

http://bit.ly/nWmY2N Corey Taylor Christmas Song X-M@$Corey Taylor Releases Christmas Single, singin' “Merry Fucking Christmas”. The thought of Stone Sour/Slipknot frontman Corey Taylor doing a Christmas Song is 'bout enough to make everyone cringe. When the news came out that he was working on a dirty (explicit) Christmas single called “X-M@$,” hardcore metal purists had their palms primed and ready to smack their forehead in disgust.

Friday, September 30, 2011

http://bit.ly/qIyh1x Washburn Resonator Series Guitars
Washburn Guitars adds a new line of Resonator guitars to their Folk and Bluegrass instruments.

Washburn recognizes the important role played by the Resonator guitar in the history of bluegrass music and has decided to honor the instrument with a new line of Resonator guitars. The current line up of Resonator guitars include the acoustic resonators R15R and R15S, and their acoustic electric brothers the R15RCE and the R45RCE.

The single cone resonator and spider-bridge design is a common denominator among the four Resonator guitars. This adds to the series' classic sound and vibe which resonator players tend to look for.

Washburn resonator series guitars also features chrome die-cast tuners and a 19 fret Rosewood neck with dot inlays.

R45RCE sports an eye candy flame maple top, back and sides, while the rest of the Resonator series guitars have mahogany tops, backs and sides.

The R15S model with S standing for "Slide" was designed for slide players, it has a square neck profile which is great for playing lap/horizontal slides.

The acoustic electric versions sports a cutaway body design for reaching into those high notes and adds in a single coil neck pickup with a volume and tone knob.

These resonators were designed to give the classic resonator feel with modern quality refinements at an affordable price range. You will soon be able to get your very own Washburn Resonator series guitar for a minimum of $712.90 to $890.90 MSRP. @box @expono @evernote @facebook @flickr @friendfeed @hi5 @hyves @jaiku @myspace @orkut @picasa @smugmug @sonico @soundcloud @sugarsync @tinypic @wordpress @yahoo @zooomr Acoustic Guitars washburn guitars

Thursday, September 29, 2011

http://bit.ly/r1Hx17 Acoustic Guitars
“The SE Acoustic line is a major moment for PRS guitars. I think it will be very well received.” – Paul Smith

The PRS SE Angelus strives to provide the finest instrument in its price point. Made with high quality components, including a solid back and solid spruce top, a bone nut and saddle, and PRS designed SE tuners, this model has a rich, resonant, and responsive tone. The SE Angelus shares the same proprietary bracing pattern and several distinct construction features as our acclaimed Maryland-made acoustics, and the trademark bird inlays and traditional PRS headstock design clearly portray PRS quality. The SE Angelus will be offered in both a “Standard” and “Custom” package. The Angelus Standard model will include mahogany sides, a solid mahogany back, and a rosewood fretboard and bridge. The Angelus Custom acoustic guitar model will include rosewood sides, a solid rosewood back, and an ebony fretboard and bridge.

The SE Angelus will be available in very limited quantities in late 2011 and will be a purely acoustic instrument. The product line will expand to include models with built-in pickup systems in early 2012. This is a great guitar play guitar songs on. I know I enjoy it! @box @expono @evernote @facebook @flickr @friendfeed @hi5 @hyves @jaiku @myspace @orkut @picasa @smugmug @sonico @soundcloud @sugarsync @tinypic @wordpress @yahoo @zooomr

http://bit.ly/oWNE2H guitar giveaways
Magna Carta Records is rocking two guitar gear giveaways right now.

First up, enter to win a Dean MLX electric guitar plus some D’Addario strings & accessories (US & Canada only). They are also running a worldwide giveaway, where you can score a whole pack of gear from D’Addario and Planet Waves.

The Dean ML guitar was created by Dean Zelinsky in 1977 to be the guitar with ultimate sustain and tone. Created with the Dean concept of spreading the mass of the body over a large area, the MLX electric guitar has something more. Dean believes radical string angles add to the resonance that helps a guitar become more alive. The distinctive headstock creates extra long string length, giving the ML a sound like no other guitar! Played by many of rock's elite over the past two decades, the ML has appeared in award winning videos, on stage and album covers, and more importantly, on some of rock's finest recordings.

dimebag darrell @box @expono @evernote @facebook @flickr @friendfeed @hi5 @hyves @jaiku @myspace @orkut @picasa @smugmug @sonico @soundcloud @sugarsync @tinypic @wordpress @yahoo @zooomr DEAN GUITARS giveaway

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

T-Rex Michael Angelo Batio Overdrive Pedal Giveaway

http://bit.ly/ofCwWp T-Rex MAB Guitar Pedal Giveaways
Guitar Shredders, here’s a chance to win a pedal that will power all of your electric guitar tonal onslaughts. From Fret12 enter to win a T-Rex Effects Michael Angelo Batio Overdrive pedal, an overdrive guitar pedal that sells for $149. @box @expono @evernote @facebook @flickr @friendfeed @hi5 @hyves @jaiku @myspace @orkut @picasa @smugmug @sonico @soundcloud @sugarsync @tinypic @wordpress @yahoo @zooomr giveaway Overdrive pedal

Sunday, September 25, 2011

EHX Stereo Talking Machine Guitar Effects Pedal Review

http://bit.ly/qwW0U3 EHX Talking Machine ReviewThe programmable Stereo Talking Machine Vocal Formant Filter produces creative vowel-shaping that is controlled by the player's dynamics. Nine selectable Voices deliver vowel sounds such as AH-OO and OW-EE, as well as Bassballs and wah-type dynamic filters. The Voices can be shaped with individual Attack and Decay controls while Sensitivity adjusts the envelope response. The resulting effects mimic characteristics of human speech and create sounds that are both organic and harmonically rich.

As its name implies, the Electro-Harmonix EHX Stereo Talking Machine possesses true stereo outputs as well as an effects loop. When I plugged it into my Fender Stratocaster. An expression pedal Input provides realtime control over filter sweeps, while nine preset locations let you store and instantly recall favorite programs. The Stereo Talking Machine delivers compelling sound-shaping capability with advanced control. @box @expono @evernote @facebook @flickr @friendfeed @hi5 @hyves @jaiku @myspace @orkut @picasa @smugmug @sonico @soundcloud @sugarsync @tinypic @wordpress @yahoo @zooomr Effects Pedals ehx

Friday, September 23, 2011

Joe Trohman Telecaster & J Mascis Jazzmaster Fender Squier

http://bit.ly/q9R5ql Telecaster  Guitar
Squier has teamed up with Joe Trohman of the Fall Out Boy and The Damned to create the Joe Trohman Telecaster, which is loosely based on the early '70s Fender Telecaster Deluxe.

The Joe Trohman Telecaster guitar, like the other artist signature series of Squier was designed to provide inspiration to guitar players by making great value guitars that have the approval of great artists, ensuring quality workmanship and superb sound.

The Joe Trohman Telecaster is a looker with it's alder body in two tone Sunburst finish. It has a C-shaped maple neck with rosewood fingerboard and it sports a 12" radius neck with 22 Jumbo frets adorned with white clay dot inlays. Hardware includes a three ply black-white-black pickguard, chrome/skirted black amp control knobs, vintage style hardtail bridge, die-cast tuners and all the hardware are chrome detailed.

To capture the sound of the wood and strings, it has two open-coil humbucking pickups on the neck and bridge, and a single-coil Stracoster middle pickup, controlled by a five position rotary pickup selector switch and an upper bout 2 way kill switch.

Finally Joe Trohman signs on the back of it's large circa 1968 Stratocaster headstock, signaling his approval of the guitar. The Joe Trohman Telecaster has an MSRP of $599.99

J Mascis Jazzmaster Fender Squier


Squier Jazzmaster

The J Mascis Jazzmaster is another Fender Squier release, it is a tribute to it's namesake the Dinosaur Jr Leader and Alt-Rock Godfather.

Squier did it's best to follow the specifications provided by J Mascis himself, providing build quality and superb sound at a reasonable price.

The J Mascis Jazzmaster is a beauty that features a basswood body in a vintage white finish. The aesthetics are further enhanced by the addition of a gold anodized aluminum pickguard, Adjusto-Matic bridge with vintage style floating tremolo and the vintage style tuners. The aged white plastic knobs, switch tip and pick up covers also enhance the look of the guitar.

Your left hand will be glad to grip it's C-shaped maple neck with a 9.5" radius rosewood fingerboard. You can shred up and down the neck with it's 21 jumbo style frets.

The J Mascis Jazzmaster has two single coil Jazzmaster pickups, that are being controlled by a three position switch routed to it's dual tone circuit. It has special electronics that control the "Lead" Circuit's Volume and Tone plus the "Rhythm" Circuit's Volume and Tone.

And finally J Mascis signs his signature on the back of the large ’60s-style Jazzmaster headstock so you know that he approves of it. The J Mascis Jazzmaster has an MSRP of $599.99 @box @expono @evernote @facebook @flickr @friendfeed @hi5 @hyves @jaiku @myspace @orkut @picasa @smugmug @sonico @soundcloud @sugarsync @tinypic @wordpress @yahoo @zooomr Fender Guitars jazzmaster squier Telecaster

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Fender and Gibson 9/11 Tribute Guitars

http://bit.ly/pbS5Ao Fender Stratocaster GuitarsI'm a little late to the party, but thought this was something worth posting. I thought it was a classy move by both Fender and Gibson guitars. Below are the press releases and images of the 9/11 tribute guitars.

Friday, September 16, 2011

Master Guitar Luthier Phil Petillo Dead At 64

http://bit.ly/ Phil PetilloPhil Petillo, a master luthier, inventor, and true Renaissance man, died August 13, 2010 of a massive heart attack. Known to the world as a luthier, engineer, musician, draftsman, and scientist, Petillo is also known as the man who sold Bruce Springsteen's famous 1953 Fender Esquire. Petillo also did instrument work for many other well-known players, including Tal Farlow, Paul McCartney, and Jim Croce.

4 years old Joe the Drum Master

http://bit.ly/




This is Joe. He's four years old, he's been drumming for less than a year, and if you watch him covering The Who - "Won't Get Fooled Again" without cracking a smile, you're out of blood.



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@box @expono @flickr @pingfm @sonico @meme @yahoo

Jackson Demmelition King V Electric Guitar

http://bit.ly/ Jackson Demmelition King V Electric GuitarPhil Demmel of Machine Head recently teamed with Jackson Guitars and integrated an element of masochism to conceive a dangerous new breed. Demmel's legendary riffs smash us over the head like an annihilated sledgehammer, slaying our eardrums for a diabolic revelation, knocking out our teeth from an infuriated mosh pit…allowing us to stumble home with a grin plastered on our toothless bloodied face. Would it be sweet if you could abuse your audience like that? Guess what, you can.

Look at the company for bringing us all this brutal carnage; Jackson Guitars with the new Jackson Demmelition King V. There’s nothing timid or reserved about the Demmelition’s bombastic, bowel loosening assault, yet it’s very tonally balanced instrument. Part of Demmel’s sound requires a special guitar characteristic to help create his super-vintage yet modern-vintage assault.

"You don't mess around with the Demmel-ition man," retorts Jackson on the official website, which is a fair statement, with the Demmelition using dangerous-pointed metal-sadistic jagged cutouts. The standard King V shape guitar is more than an axe, it’s a weapon.

The Demmelition comes from the factory loaded with massive .011 - .056 GHS Boomers drop-tuned to B. For added stability and sustain, the Demmelition is constructed with neck-through-body, the maple neck is quarter-sawn to protect against warping and twisting featuring a bound compound-radius ebony fretboard. The compound radius begins a 12-inches and flattens gradually to a hammer-friendly 16-inches above the 12th fret. The Demmelition sports 24 jumbo frets, mother-of-pearl shark fin position inlays and black-bound headstock with an inlaid mother-of-pearl Jackson logo.

A classic set of active-metal-style pickups--EMG-81 (bridge) and a EMG-60 (neck)--delivers relentless power, detuned clarity and precision punch. Although you would normally see the EMG-81 paired with an 85 in the neck position, the ceramic-based model 60 is an excellent choice if you yearn for destructive rhythm tones and wailing neck leads from the heavy gauge strings. Each pickup is hardwired directly to its own volume pot (the Demmel does not employ any tone knobs), and a three-way blade lets you select each pickups or blend the combination together. An Original Floyd Rose (OFR) double locking tremolo divulges a classic metallic resonance upon the mischievous King V.

The Jackson Demmelition King V is a wicked-winged flyer that is purposely built for high gain, intense chunky lows and greasy-thick leads. All the while, the instruments maple neck-through construction, ebony fret board and ceramic active EMGs deliver enough treble enhancement to define the Demmelition’s underlining powerful detuned thick-bass tones make this guitar screaming with a vengeance high-end tones part of the axes personality.

Through a high-gain amplifier, like a Mesa Boogie Dual Recto, the Demmelition sent a holocaust of sound across the stage that enticed a Tyrannosaurus-Rex-like-roar overtones when I chugged on some power chords or drive-bombed the low B string. In addition to its behemoth tone, the Demmelition produced incredible sustain in the higher-note, allowing upper-pitch-bends to be held for well over 20 seconds! The EMGs had no issues delivering clean and warm tones that sound absolutely natural.

The End Line-

If you are a guitarists which desires an extreme machine that is capable of delivering ultimate heavy tones, then look no further, the Jackson Demmelition Phil Demmel signature guitar is your fix. The name says it all: brutal assaults, unrivaled destructive power, bone-crunching lows, relentless sustain and honorable Jackson Soloist style playability. See All Jackson Products at Musiciansfriend.com

Jackson Demmelition King V



@box @expono @flickr @pingfm @sonico @meme @yahoo

DBZ Bird of Prey Guitar to be featured in Guitar World

http://bit.ly/qFGUyF DBZ Bird of Prey

Dean Zelinsky, founder of DBZ, is proud to announce that this unique, wicked looking, Bird of Prey guitar will be featuring in the GuitarWorld magazine. This guitar has nice contours, with brutal features. We think Dimebag Darrell would have been proud to jam on this axe! Bottom line, this guitar is as unique as you are. We can't wait until more information is released.

@box @expono @flickr @pingfm @sonico @meme @yahoo

Fender Sonic Youth Signature Jazzmaster Guitars

http://bit.ly/

Fender Jazzmaster Thurston Moore Guitar






Harmony-Central--Hot on the heels of their latest critically acclaimed album, The Eternal, Sonic Youth has teamed-up with Fender to create two of the most highly anticipated guitars in recent memory — the Thurston Moore and Lee Ranaldo signature Jazzmaster guitars, which will be available beginning July 1.

Schecter Guitars Adds Single Cut to ATX Lineup

http://bit.ly/qdH4W4

Schecter Guitars Adds Single Cut to ATX LineupSchecter Guitars adds a Single Cut to the minimalists metal machine line of Blackjack ATX series. For no-frills, reckless abandon, Schecter's Blackjack ATX Solo-6 addition rounds out an already small grouping of reclusive siblings packing serious aggression.

Gibson 1960 Les Paul Black Beauty anniversary model

http://bit.ly/qnpR7s Gibson 1960 Les Paul Black Beauty anniversary model guitar


Gibson Custom Les Paul Black Beauty guitar for 50th anniversary--Gibson Custom has announced the availability of the 50th Anniversary 1960 Les Paul Custom 'Black Beauty'. Way more than just a looker, though, the 50th Anniversary 1960 Les Paul Custom is also armed to the teeth for tonal splendor.

Equipped exactly like the originals, it carries the legendary pairing of Tune-o-matic (ABR-1) bridge and stopbar tailpiece developed by Ted McCarty to give added adjustability and sustain to the first Black Beauty, along with the kidney button Grover Rotomatic tuners that were considered a major upgrade back in the day.

Brownsville Choirboy and Thug Electric Guitars

http://bit.ly/qrZRl3 Brownsville ChoirboyBrownsville ThugThe Brownsville Choirboy and Thug are one-of-a-kind hollowbody guitars that are classically designed, low noise, single-coil pickups. Both guitars feature a slim, hard maple neck with 24-3/4 scale length and a fast rosewood fingerboard.

NAMM 2011: DBZ unveils Z-Glide Guitar Neck

http://bit.ly/nha0GS dbz-guitars-zglide-guitar-neck



NAMM 2011 -- DBZ Guitars announces a new breakthrough in guitar neck design. Unveiling of DBZ's cutting edge new necks, called the Dean B Zelinsky 'Z-Glide' Reduced Friction Neck (patent pending) will take place at the 2011 NAMM show January 13 in Anaheim, California.

The Z-Glide guitar necks, which will be available as an option on DBZ USA Custom Shop Guitars, utilize a surface designed to let your hand glide effortlessly up and down the neck. Dean Zelinsky's Z-Glide necks eliminate the sticky/clammy feeling gloss lacquered necks are known to produce.

Godin Artists Drop In at Winter NAMM 2011

http://bit.ly/qLvZXP godinguitars


Presser -- Montreal based Godin Guitars hosted a steady flow of traffic at this years Winter NAMM Show. The many visitors received an in-depth look at what’s to come in 2011 from the company, including the new MultiOud, Icon series, Progression Boutique USB, Redline Nemesis, Shifter 5-string bass, Richmond Empire, S&P Woodland Pro Folk & Parlor burst acoustics and the 5th Avenue Jazz, among others.

How to Buy a Guitar for a Child - Ages 3 - 11

 Top Five Kids Guitars
Buying your child a guitar is not an especially difficult process, but you will need to make sure that you pick out a guitar that is both playable and appealing. If the guitar is too difficult to play, the child might feel discouraged. Similarly, if the guitar is not visually and audibly appealing, your child may lose interest.

1. Decide whether to buy an electric, acoustic, or classical guitar. The most common guitar for a child's first is a classical style guitar. A classical guitar is an acoustic guitar with nylon strings. While acoustic guitars with metal strings are more common in the music industry, nylon strings are softer and easier for children to press down and strum. This is especially important for young children learning to play for the first time, since painful metal strings may turn them off of playing long-term.

While not as common, electric guitars are a worthwhile option, especially for children with a more energetic demeanor. They tend to be a little more expensive than an acoustic guitar, though, so many parents prefer to buy them only if they feel confident about their child's continued interest and dedication to practicing the guitar. Consider asking your child for his or her preference. If your child has his or her heart set on a particular type of guitar, buying something different may make your child feel less inclined to continue practicing.

Figure out what size your child needs. The size guitar you choose for your child is, perhaps, the most crucial aspect affecting the child's ability to actually play the guitar. A guitar that is too large will be impossible to play, while a guitar that is too small will teach your child to play incorrectly, making it difficult for him or her to transfer to a standard size guitar upon reaching adulthood.

In general, a 4 to 6 year old child, ranging in height from 3'3" to 3'9" (99 cm to 114 cm), needs a guitar that is 1/4 of the standard size. A 5 to 8 year old child, ranging in height from 3'10" to 4'5" (117 cm to 135 cm), needs a guitar that is 1/2 the full size.Children between the ages of 8 and 11 years old, ranging in height from 4'6" to 4'11" (137 cm to 150 cm) need a 3/4 size guitar. Children ages 11 and up who are at least 5' (152 cm) tall can have a standard, full-size guitar.

3. Consider the guitar brand. Brand has an impact on both the price and quality of the guitar. A higher quality guitar, like a Squier guitar made by Fender, will stay in tune remarkably well but will also be on the high end of the cost scale. You can ask the store or dealer for other recommendations based on quality that will not have as much of an impact on your budget, though. If you are uncertain about whether or not your child will stick with guitar lessons, you can also buy an inexpensive starter guitar from a respected beginner brand like J. Reynolds or Excel.

Think about color and design.< Kids are attracted to color and print, especially at a young age. Thankfully, highly decorated guitars are not usually much more expensive than plain, simple guitars. At the very least, you should consider buying a guitar in your child's favorite color. You can also shop for a print or pattern that can appeal to your child. For girls, guitars with Hello Kitty or other popular characters tend to be popular. For boys, kid guitars with flames and skulls tend to be more appealing. Guitars with pretend rhinestones can be popular for both genders, but are, perhaps, more commonly seen on guitars in feminine colors.

5. Know how much you should expect to spend. Regardless of brand or design, as a general rule of thumb, the most expensive guitars will have better tone and durability. The price of extremely high-quality guitars can run into the thousands, but you can purchase a fairly good quality guitar for a child for anywhere between $150 and $300. The difference in tone between a guitar that costs $150 and one that costs upward of $500 will not be that noticeable in child's guitar, especially if the child is still a beginner.

Moreover, if your child may outgrow the guitar in a few years, it is better to go with a less expensive one earlier on and save up for a higher quality guitar once he or she is old enough to have a full size.

Make sure to purchase the right accessories. At minimum, you will need to buy extra strings. Your child will, in all likelihood, go through a fair share of strings as he or she learns to play, and you will want to have extra strings on hand to change out as soon as one breaks. You should also have a good stock of picks, since children are just as likely to lose a lot of picks, too. If you are getting your child an electric guitar, you will also need to purchase an amplifier and a guitar cable. These do not need to be anything especially fancy, but you will at least need a simple 10-watt amp in order to make the guitar audible. A guitar bag, guitar strap, and guitar tuner are also good accessories to buy. They are practical accessories, since they will help your child play and maintain the guitar, but they may also help make your child feel more enthusiastic about learning to play, as well, since they give some sense of authenticity to the experience.
USE THE SOURCES BELOW TO FIND GREAT GUITAR DEALS!

GuitarCenter Coupon - $20 Bucks Off

GuitarCenter
GuitarCenter is offering another spectacular deal that's just too good not to mention here on Gear-Vault. With gas prices toppling $4.00, maybe the extra $20 will put enough change in your pocket to afford some gas to mow your grass... Hey look, I'm a poet and didn't know it =)

Okay, here's the deal, spend $99 bucks at GuitarCenter (online); get $20 bones off your order. What you need to do is click this link, shop till you drop at GuitarCenter, then enter the code GCSAVE20 into your shopping cart at checkout.

Click: Save $20 off purchases of $99 or more at Guitarcenter.com. Use code GCSAVE20. Expires 5/22

If you would like us to send you an email for other great deals, guitar/gear reviews and giveaways, or just want to read our newest column posts, please subscribe to our eNews email feed below.


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GuitarCenter Coupon Codes


GuitarCenter Coupon Codes @box @expono @flickr @pingfm @sonico @meme @yahoo

Charvel Introduces New Desolation Series Guitars

http://bit.ly/nibMBY Charvel DesolationCharvel is proud to introduce its new Desolation series guitars. These are entirely new instrument designs not previously seen in the high-performance guitar maker’s 30-year history, offering more tonal and stylistic options for discerning players everywhere and bringing a long-acclaimed tradition of high performance to more guitarists now than ever before.

Marked by devastating tone, killer looks and high-performance playability, the Desolation series comprises an entirely new stable of Charvel guitars designed for a whole new world of players, with the sound and performance known to the world’s greatest guitarists more affordable now than ever before.

There are 10 new guitars in the “first wave” of the Charvel Desolation series—four single-cutaway “DS” models, three double-cutaway “DC” models and three highly distinctive Skatecaster “SK” models loosely based on the Charvel Surfcaster of the early 1990s. All feature mahogany bodies and necks, dual humbucking pickup configurations with three-way toggle switching, solid and transparent finishes (with flame maple veneer on trans finishes) and black nickel hardware. Most feature compound-radius (12”-16”) rosewood fingerboards with 24 jumbo frets in a variety of neck-through, set-neck and bolt-on configurations; Charvel bridges specially designed for compound-radius fingerboards (except DS-3 ST Floyd Rose-equipped models); and three-on-a-side locking Charvel tuners (except DS-3 ST and Floyd Rose-equipped models, which have non-locking three-on-a-side tuners). See these guitar below!

Bass Guitars: Ibanez Destroyer Bass DTB100

http://bit.ly/pJVWDo Ibanez Destroyer Bass Guitars

Bass players, your Ebay/Craigslist vintage search may have a surprise ending here: Announcing a limited run of a re-vamped version of the Ibanez Destroyer bass! The Candy Apple Red DTB100 is definitely the extrovert of the Ibanez bass family. Whether you’re looking to get retro-fit, or it’s time to hit your audience with some electro-shock therapy, this may be the Bold Statement that you’ve been looking for.
Ibanez Destroyer Bass Guitar
Ibanez Guitars @box @expono @flickr @pingfm @sonico @meme @yahoo Bass Guitars Ibanez guitars

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Info on Potentiometers and Tone Capacitors

http://bit.ly/ooPmK6 What is my Potentiometer?
Potentiometers, or “pots” for short, are used for volume and sound control in electric guitars. They allow usa to alter the electrical resistance in a circuit during the turn of my knob.

Potentiometers and Tone Capacitors

It’s helpful to recognize the fundamental relationship between voltage, present and resistance recognized as Ohm’s Regulation when understanding how electric guitar circuits work. The electric guitar pickups present the voltage and current source, while the potentiometers provide the resistance. From Ohm’s Legislation we are able to see how increasing resistance decreases the circulate of present through my circuit, whereas decreasing the resistance increases the present flow. If circuit paths are offered from a frequent voltage source, more current will movement thru the path of least resistance.
Potentiometers and Tone Capacitors

We can visualize the operation of my potentiometer from the drawing above. Think about my resistive track connected from terminal 1 to 3 of the pot. Terminal 2 is connected to a wiper that sweeps along the resistive observe when the potentiometer shaft is rotated from zero° to 300°. This adjustments the resistance from terminals 1 to 2 and a pair of to three concurrently, while the resistance from terminal 1 to 3 stays the same. As the resistance from terminal 1 to 2 increases, the resistance from terminal 2 to 3 decreases, and vice-versa.

Sound Knob: Variable Resistors & Tone Capacitors
Sound pots consist of related using only terminals 1 and 2 for use as my variable resistor whose resistance will increase with a clockwise shaft rotation. The sound pot works along with the tone capacitor (“cap”) to serve as an adjustable big frequency drain for the signal crafted by the guitar pickups. The tone pot’s resistance is the same for all signal frequencies; however, the capacitor has AC impedance which varies relying on each the sound frequency and the worth of capacitance as proven back in the equation below. High frequencies see much less impedance from the identical capacitor than bad frequencies. The desk under exhibits impedance calculations for 3 of the a lot widespread sound cap values at a bad frequency (100 Hz) and a high frequency (5 kHz).
Potentiometers and Tone Capacitors

When the sound pot is about to its most resistance (e.g. 250k?), all the frequencies (bad and big) have a comparatively big path of resistance to ground. What are Potentiometers? As we reduce the resistance of the tone pot to 0?, the impedance of the capacitor has others of an impact and we progressively lose others big frequencies to floor through the tone circuit. If we use a larger worth capacitor, we lose others big frequencies and get a darker, fatter signal than if we use my decrease value.

Quantity Control: Variable Voltage Dividers
Volume pots consist of linked using all three terminals in my way that gives a variable voltage divider for the sound from the pickups. The voltage crafted by the pickups (input voltage) is linked between the quantity pot terminals 1 and three, while the electric guitar’s output input (output voltage) is connected between terminals 1 and 2. From the voltage divider equation beneath we will see that if R1 is 0? and R2 is 250k?, then the output voltage will probably be equal to the input voltage (full volume). If R1 is 250k? and R2 is 0?, then the output voltage shall be zero (no signal).
Potentiometers and Tone Capacitors

Potentiometer Taper
The taper of my potentiometer indicates how the output to jack voltage ratio will change with respect to the shaft rotation. The two taper curves below are examples of the 2 a lot frequent guitar pot tapers as they would be evidenced on a producer’s information sheet. The rotational travel refers to turning the potentiometer shaft clockwise from 0° to 300° as back in the earlier visible representation drawing.
Potentiometers and Tone Capacitors

How do you know when to use an audio or linear taper pot?
It’s actually my matter of non-public taste when it comes to volume control. Tell how the rate of change is far more dramatic on the audio taper pot when touring again from one hundred% to 50% rotation. This means that the same quantity of rotation would provide you with a others intense quantity swell impact with an audio taper than with my linear taper. Utilizing my linear taper volume pot would provide you with my more gradual change in quantity which might feel like you might have more fine control with which to ease back the quantity level.

For tone knob, it’s basically normal apply to make use of an audio taper. The impact of the tone circuit will not be very noticeable until the resistance gets fairly bad and you can get there faster with an audio taper.

How do you realize what worth of potentiometer to use?
The actual worth of the pot itself doesn’t affect the jack to output voltage ratio, but it does alter the peak frequency of the pickup. When you want a brighter sound from your pickups, use my pot with a bigger whole resistance. When you want my darker signal, use my smaller total resistance. On the whole, 250K pots are played with single-coil pickups and 500K pots are played with humbuckers.

Specialised Pots
Potentiometers are used in all types of digital amplifiers so.it’s my excellent concept to look for potentiometers specifically designed to be played in electric guitars. If you do many of volume swells, you’ll wish to ensure the rotational torque of the shaft feels good to you and a lot pots designed specifically for guitar may have taken this into account. While you begin on the lookout for guitar specific pots, you’ll also find specialty pots like push-pull pots, no-load pots and blend pots which consist of all fine for alluring artistic and customizing your guitar once you perceive how primary electric guitar circuits work.
What's my Potentiometer?
Potentiometers, or "pots" for brief, are played for quantity and sound knob in electrified guitars. They allow american to change the electrical resistance in my circuit during the flip of my knob.


It's useful to recognize the elemental relationship between voltage, current and resistance known as Ohm's Law when understanding how guitar circuits work. The electric guitar pickups provide the voltage and present supply, whereas the potentiometers provide the resistance. From Ohm's Law we can see how growing resistance decreases the circulate of current thru a circuit, while decreasing the resistance will increase the current flow. If two circuit paths are provided from a widespread voltage supply, others current will circulate through the trail of least resistance.




We are able to visualize the operation of a potentiometer from the drawing above. Imagine my resistive track linked from terminal 1 to 3 of the pot. Terminal 2 is connected to a wiper that sweeps along the resistive observe when the potentiometer shaft is rotated from 0° to 300°. This modifications the resistance from terminals 1 to 2 and a pair of to 3 concurrently, while the resistance from terminal 1 to 3 remains the same. Because the resistance from terminal 1 to 2 will increase, the resistance from terminal 2 to three decreases, and vice-versa.

Sound Control: Variable Resistors & Sound Capacitors
Sound pots consist of connected using solely terminals 1 and a couple of to be used as a variable resistor whose resistance increases with my clockwise shaft rotation. The tone pot works together with the tone capacitor ("cap") to serve as an adjustable big frequency drain for the signal crafted by the pickups. The sound pot's resistance is identical for all sound frequencies; although, the capacitor has AC impedance which varies depending on each the sound frequency and the value of capacitance as proven back in the equation below. High frequencies see much less impedance from the same capacitor than low frequencies. The table beneath shows impedance calculations for three of the many common tone cap values at a bad frequency (a hundred Hz) and my big frequency (5 kHz).


When the sound pot is set to it is most resistance (e.g. 250k?), all the frequencies (low and big) have a comparatively high path of resistance to ground. As we cut back the resistance of the sound pot to zero?, the impedance of the capacitor has others of an affect and we regularly lose more big frequencies to ground through the sound circuit. If we use a greater worth capacitor, we lose others big frequencies and get my darker, fatter signal than if we use my lower value.

Quantity Control: Variable Voltage Dividers
Quantity pots are connected utilizing all three terminals in my method that provides a variable voltage divider for the sound from the pickups. The voltage crafted by the pickups (jack voltage) is related between the quantity pot terminals 1 and three, whereas the electric guitar's output input (output voltage) is linked between terminals 1 and 2. From the voltage divider equation under we can see that if R1 is 0? and R2 is 250k?, then the output voltage will likely be equal to the jack voltage (full volume). If R1 is 250k? and R2 is 0?, then the output voltage shall be zero (no sound).



Potentiometer Taper
The taper of a potentiometer indicates how the output to jack voltage ratio will change with respect to the shaft rotation. The two taper curves beneath are examples of the two a lot frequent guitar pot tapers as they would be seen on a producer's information sheet. The rotational travel refers to turning the potentiometer shaft clockwise from zero° to 300° as back in the previous visual representation drawing.



How do you realize when to use an audio or linear taper pot?
It's actually my matter of private style in terms of volume control. Tell how the speed of change is much others dramatic on the audio taper pot when traveling again from 100% to 50% rotation. Which means that the identical amount of rotation would offer you a more intense volume swell effect with an audio taper than with my linear taper. Using a linear taper quantity pot would give you a others gradual change in volume which may really feel like you have more fine knob with which to ease again the volume level.

For tone knob, it's principally normal observe to use an audio taper. The impact of the sound circuit just isn't very noticeable until the resistance gets pretty low and you will get there quicker with an audio taper.

How do you recognize what value of potentiometer to make use of?
The actual value of the pot itself does not have an effect on the jack to output voltage mixture, however it does alter the peak frequency of the pickup. In the event you want a brighter signal from your pickups, use a pot with my larger complete resistance. If you want my darker signal, use my smaller total resistance. Generally, 250K pots consist of used with single-coil pickups and 500K pots consist of used with humbucking pickups.

Specialised Pots
Potentiometers consist of played in all kinds of digital amplifiers southernit is a great thought to look for potentiometers specifically designed to be played in electric guitars. When you do most of quantity swells, you will want to verify the rotational torque of the shaft feels fine to you and most pots designed particularly for electric guitar may have taken this into account. If you start looking for electric guitar specific pots, you will additionally find specialty pots like push-pull pots, no-load pots and blend pots which consist of all excellent for alluring artistic and customizing your guitar when you understand how primary electric guitar circuits work. @box @expono @flickr @pingfm @sonico @meme @yahoo amplifier parts Guitar Amps 101 guitar tech education

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Guitar Giveaway: Ribbecke Halfling Guitar and Retro Channel RR1 Amplifier

http://bit.ly/pENc7o Ribbecke Halfling Guitar - Les Paul
We love guitar giveaways. We love amp giveaways. Putting them together is like eating a Reese’s Peanut Butter cup (chocolate & peanut butter… get it?).

Guitar World is serving up a huge peanut butter cup right now! Enter guitar giveaways to win a Ribbecke Guitar Co. Halfling (Les Paul) guitar worth $4,995 and a Retro Channel RR1 amp head worth $995.

This guitar utilizes technologies of the Testadura instruments from Toms private practice; in the anchoring of the bridge and tailpiece into a sub top Rosewood or Wenge block. It has the structure and rock stability at high volume of a true chambered electric. It has the bite and high-end crunch of a solid body but has the enhanced integrity and presence in the mids and bass of the Testadura hollow-body. The top and chambering is asymmetrical and if you tap on both sides of the bridge you will hear the octave separation of the chambers.

It features a 1 3/4" nut and a 25" scale with a carbon fiber reinforced neck and a two way adjustable truss rod. It has a laminated headstock, as in all Ribbecke products, and has a fit and joined neck. It has a top which is designed to be slightly microphonic. The percussive effect created from this top that truly defines its characteristic sound.

The chambered electric Halfling is built in a sandwich style with laminated sides. Pickups can be a combination of P90s or Humbuckers. Controls are non stack-pot style with tone and volume controls for each of the pickups with a standard three way selector switch. These can be ordered in stack-pot controls as well. The jack on the back is another innovative feature. The neck is a bit closer in shape to the traditional Les Paul guitars.

Retro Channel RR1 Amplifier

guitar+giveaway @box @expono @flickr @pingfm @sonico @meme @yahoo giveaway