T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2047.1 | | NEEPS::IRVINE | The B�t�h has GONE!!!! | Fri Nov 30 1990 06:04 | 7 |
| I tried this once with a cheap 'n' nasty stereo... it blew up!
The ZOOM 9002 processor does come supplied with leads to allow you
to play along with you fav tunes through your stereo, but I don't
know if the out concerned form the Zoom is limited to line levels.
Bob
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2047.2 | It can be done, but not ideal | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Fri Nov 30 1990 08:57 | 30 |
| No matter what, this won't be an ideal system, but it can be done.
As long as the power amp is not clipping you shouldn't cause any
damage to the amp itself. I would make sure to run my guitar thru
a compressor/limiter to tame the peak transients.
Stereo preamps/recievers accept line level signals from tape decks,
cd players, hi-fi vcr's, etc. The only signal going into a stereo
preamp that it not at line level is the signal from a turn-table.
These signals (the output of your magnetic cartridge) are much smaller
than line level signals and are amplified by an "RIAA" preamp circuit
which drives the them up to line level (~1v rms).
The best way to play through a stereo is to run through a preamp
(ie. a Sholz Rockman, Zoom, Roland GP8, Boss ME5, etc.) and into
a tape input. Listen for distortion from your amp or speakers.
This will be a function of the amps headroom and the ruggedness of
your speakers. If your speakers are wimpy, the cones are likely
to suffer from longer excursions than they are designed to handle.
This could cause the speakers to self-destruct. If you hear any
hints of distortion (other than overdrive/distortion created
intentionally by your preamp) then run the stereo at a lower volume.
I routinely play through a Mesa Boogie preamp, into my stereo PA
system (which is really nothing more than a glorified stereo sytem).
with great results. I'm using very rugged components, though, and
compression.
Mark
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2047.3 | | PELKEY::PELKEY | Life, a state of cluster transition | Fri Nov 30 1990 10:00 | 13 |
| Your best bet would probably be to go through some preamp/amp like
has already been mentioned. I have a rockman, and have on occasion
run it through the stereo. (however, the biggest benny with these
types of small i.c. amps is the abiltiy to play the stereo, back
through the amp, thus play along with a tape deck, record/cd player.
Excellent for learning material, or working with recording projects
on early mix downs when one is looking for a good solo to write down,
or work in some rythm, or midi instruments.)
as far as unsightly, gawd, how could a guitar amp ever be unsightly.
Women,, can't live with, can't shoot em! :)
|
2047.4 | Realistic salesmen do not suggest it! | CIMNET::CAFE | | Fri Nov 30 1990 15:52 | 16 |
| This is a very strange coincidenece.I just brought my Realistic
reciever down to the store last weekend for service.It's a
45 watt per channel reciever and what I do is plug into a mic
jack in one of my tape deck which is connected to the reciever
and put a blank tape in and put it in the record mode.
I've always done this w/ my peavey foundation bass,but in
the past few weeks I picked an Ibanez SR800le Bass w/
a preamp in it and have routinely been playing thru my stereo.
Sounded Awesome, but the bottom line = I THINK I BLEW IT UP!!!
I was listening to music one day and all of a sudden the music just
cut out on me, then came back for a couple seconds then came back
on then cut out again.This went on for a few days until finally
I couldn't get one source to come through the stereo. I don't know
If playing My Bass thru the stereo caused this or not but
I will find out soon enough.
Rick
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2047.5 | NO NO NO, BAD BAD BAD, WRONG WRONG WRONG! | JUPITR::TASHJIAN | | Sat Dec 01 1990 01:23 | 8 |
| You can't hurt the electronics in the stereo, but NO home
stereo speaker is strong enough to handle the S/N and attack
of guitar & bass. DO NOT DO IT!!!
Unless you got money to burn......
Jay
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2047.6 | lots of folk wisdom on this topic, huh? | LNGBCH::STEWART | Instant gratification takes 2 long! | Sat Dec 01 1990 10:42 | 11 |
|
What's the difference between a live guitar (properly limited)
and a Van Halen track off a CD player? Not much, I bet (if
you've got Eddie's chops). Just to be on the safe side, I keep
my stereo's amp set so that my signal peaks don't exceed the
-3dB level. Most of the time I also use the compressor/limiter
in my VCR as insurance - it's expensive to rebuild those JBLs.
|
2047.7 | Compression and EQ | AQUA::ROST | Drink beer: Live 6 times longer | Mon Dec 03 1990 08:56 | 15 |
| > What's the difference between a live guitar (properly limited)
> and a Van Halen track off a CD player? Not much, I bet
Proper limiting is part of the trick...playing uncompressed instruments
through stereos is real tough on the speakers. Also EQ, I have yet to
hear any normal (i.e. not mega$$ audiophile) speakers reproduce extreme
low bass (anything much below 100 Hz) which is present on guitars and
basses (open E on a guitar is about 80 Hz, 40 Hz on a bass). Most
albums really don't have much energy below 100 Hz.
Think about it, if music sounds "normal" over your typical boom box,
it has to be processed pretty heavily....we're talking half a watt
driving a pair of 4" speakers...
Brian
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2047.8 | | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Mon Dec 03 1990 10:16 | 14 |
| > What's the difference between a live guitar (properly limited)
> and a Van Halen track off a CD player? Not much, I bet
Van Halen's signal coming off the CD is "limited", your's isn't.
The CD can not overdrive your amp to the point of sending voltage down
to the speakers. Your unlimited guitar can.
There are devices specifically for "limiting", however the mere act of
recording a signal "limits" the signal. You could look at a limiting
or "compressing" device as a tool that allows you to shape the dynamic
range in some way OTHER than what the recording medium imposes (like
always reducing the signal to recordable levels rather than allowing
distortion).
|
2047.9 | what about acoustic guitar and voice (low volume) | COGITO::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Mon Dec 03 1990 11:14 | 13 |
|
I used to use the tape deck and receiver through stereo speakers for
small rooms before I got a PA amp and speakers. I play accoustic
guitar and sing. I've been asked to play at a small party, and I think
it would be overkill to use my PA speakers, but I'd like to have a
little amplification. Any ideas? Can I hook my PA amp up to stereo
speakers if I keep the volume low? Or just use a mic mixer, tape deck,
receiver, and stereo speakers? One advantage to using the home stereo
receiver would be that I could put a set of speakers in different rooms
of the house at low volume instead of one pair of PA speakers at higher
volume hoping to carry to other rooms in the house.
Justine
|
2047.10 | | E::EVANS | | Mon Dec 03 1990 13:12 | 9 |
|
I've been playing my guitar through Klipschorns at home with no apparent damage
except maybe my ears. ;-)
I think the potential for damage depends on the quality and construction of
your stereo.
Jim
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2047.11 | there are speakers, and then there are speakers | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Mon Dec 03 1990 13:21 | 19 |
| regarding last 2, I have 2 sets of Klipsch speakers at home. One
set is the KG4 which are home stereo speakers. The other set is
the industrial version of the Heresey II. These are stage monitors,
so they are definately made to take the pounding of sound re-inforce-
ment. I wouldn't want to place that much stress on my KG4's but
the few times that I did use them for musical instrument, they
sounded fine.
I used to have a set of Altec Lansing "Voice of the Theater"
speakers which were custom built to Altec plans, with 300 watt Altec
15" speakers for woofers, and compression driven horns for mid-range
and tweeters. I hooked up my P.A. to these cabs many times. They could
take anything I could throw at them.
Like someone said, it all depends on what you have for a stereo,
especially the speakers. A compressor/limiter is a good insurance
policy for protecting your system.
Mark
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2047.12 | Why it breaks | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | This time forever! | Wed Dec 05 1990 12:30 | 25 |
|
It's cool to see such touting of compressor/limiters as the
solution to this type of problem. In your audio toolkit, it's like
having a "pair of pliers" - There's some things you just wont be able
to do without one...
One time in our lab, I evaluated my Bass guitar (with a Dimarzio)
using this sophisticated Tektronix Oscillscope, which had a signal
analyzer option. A little ticker tape would come out of this machine,
stating all the interesting attributes of the signal it just measured.
One item on the printout was "peak voltage". I found that I could get
several *volts* outta that pickup, with a good hard string snap.
Put this into a "mic" input of a tape deck, or a "line" input
of you HiFi amp, and you can see how an input expecting 10 or 100
thousandths of a volt might get a little "overdriven" - depending
on how you play and where your volume control is set ;') Turn it
down and play softly and lightly - no problem. Crank it out and
start bangin' on it - you'll easily send your tape deck's preamp
and/or your power amp and/or your speakers into the non-linear zone!
This is where the fragile stuff start breaking.
Joe
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2047.13 | | MOMUNY::64288::COLLUM | Oscar's only ostrich oiled an orange owl today | Wed Dec 05 1990 15:19 | 6 |
| I had read al the way back into the late 70's that double coil pickups put out
around 3.5 volts peak. No doubt some are louder now.
And yep, that's way over what a stereo input wants to see.
Will
|