guitar noise reduction pedal
Can anyone help with the feedback I'm getting my guitar?

The thing is, I have a Hohner HW-300 electro-acoustic guitar. It is equipped with a Shadow P3 pickup-Pro. When I plug it into my guitar amp, the feedback he gets too high. Moreover, there is a phase change in control of the collector, next to the EQ, what does it do? has nothing to do with noise reduction. And one final question: is playing his acoustic guitar through an overdrive pedal damage the guitar amplifier (20w valve amp)? PS: When I was referring to the highest caliber, the guitar was clean, without distortion. Thank you!

This does not necessarily mean having a very sound for feeding back. You need a sound hole caps, its a rubber "plug" that fits into your sound hole guitars. This should eliminate the feedback. Gain (ie, distortion) and be very close to the amplifier or speakers are the major causes of feedback, but with an acoustic guitar that you have this big ol 'body', ie lots of room in which to create all kinds of resonances. One can not require hardly any volume at all before starting to feed back! * After some thought you checked the level of your pickup onboard? Try to pull the low level, and put all your EQ controls the mid-range. With active electronics .... * * 5 = often neuter So if you're becoming the past, you may be increasing production, and that means gain / distortion, which could easily be the culprit of that feedback. This is especially the case with their area of mud "frequencies, 300 - ie 800 Hz, and its mids, anywhere from 700 Hz - 3 kHz depending on the instrument. Same thing goes for the EQ controls on your amp. Put 'em all the five, and put the volume on its lowest setting audible. If you are still receiving feedback, then there is feedback - You have some other issue going on, maybe a ground loop or a bad connection or a battery that goes dead or even a bad tube (a tube microphone gone, for example, may sound a lot like feedback). My advice would be to plug your guitar directly into the amp and go item by item across all signal components, and see if you find the culprit. Put all the EQ settings in neutral, and one each by an increase to 10, dropping it to 0, etc., and see if you can turn this feedback out. Touching one of the tubes (when the amplifier is connected, your insurance) lightly with a stick and listen to the clear bell like sound coming through the amplifier, then you have a bad tube. The phase switch ... The easiest way of putting this is that it reverses the sign upside down. That will not make it sound different to our ears on their own, but if you're recording a guitar track and collector * * mic'ing him, there is a chance that the signal from your microphone will be out of phase with the signal of your pickup. Combining two signals out of phase results in a low tone, empty. The phase switch reverses the output pickups, which would help resolve this dilemma, ie the phase switch can help align the phase of the signal pickup for stage mic signal. Gee, I hope this made sense. You pretty much can not damage your amp connecting any instrument or pedal it, unless you do something silly like plug output power amplifier for it, that would be bad. What you may damage is your speakers (like the other answerer mentioned ).... This is basically turning the amp too loud. The speakers should always be assessed by as much or more than the output of your amplifier to avoid this. Once you start adding distortion, especially the output of a tube amp really rises, more speakers are rated as a good thing. If you want more thoughts on the subject, feel free to e-mail, ok? Good luck! Saul

isp decimator noise reduction pedal review


Boss NS-2


Boss NS-2


$88.50


Have you even been standing there before your amp, axe in hand, thinking to yourself, "if only my sound was a little noisier...." Didn't think so. The problem is, some of the best pickups and effects are just plain noisy - there's really nothing you can do about that, it's just a fact of life. So you're left with two options, live with the noise, or deal with it. Here's a killer way of dealing wit...

ISP Technologies Decimator G String Noise Reduction Guitar Effects Pedal


ISP Technologies Decimator G String Noise Reduction Guitar Effects Pedal


$219.95


The Decimator G String is a noise reduction pedal that delivers performance like that of the renowned ISP Decimator ProRackG. The Decimator G String provides a totally independent channel of sound reduction that can be inserted into a series effects loop or after a preamp section with the advantage of having the Decimator level detectors track the guitar signal directly. With the G String pedal yo...

ISP Technologies Decimator Noise Reduction Pedal


ISP Technologies Decimator Noise Reduction Pedal


$129.95


The Decimator guitar pedal offers a new approach to Noise Reduction processing with a high level of performance. Most noise suppression systems suffer from one major problem inherent in their design: The system cannot be immediately responsive to very short-term staccato notes. The typical downward expander sound reduction system suffers from a dead zone in the release response characteristic that...


Guitar Related Blogs