T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2282.1 | | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Green tinted 60s mind | Wed Aug 07 1991 16:27 | 19 |
| I hope you don't mind, but acting as moderator of this notesfile, I
changed the title of your note to something that would make it easier
to find.
To try and answer the questions you asked:
The Line Out jack is generally a line level output which can be used to
go straight into a mixing board or recorder, so that a mike in front of
your speakers is not needed. It can also be used to send signal to a
another power amp, for building a more powerful rig.
The gain control is generally used (on a guitar amp) to set the amount
of preamp distortion which the amp will produce. Ie increasing the
gain will yield more output and more distortion. It can also be used
to compensate for different level input signals.
Hope this helps,
Greg
|
2282.2 | .2 | CSLALL::ONEILL | | Thu Aug 08 1991 14:53 | 3 |
| Thanks,
Heres a few more, what's the purpose of limiters?
crossovers and bi-amping?.....
|
2282.3 | Guitar players don't *usually* bi-amp | KLAATU::KELLYJ | Master of rhythm, Phd in swing | Fri Aug 09 1991 09:56 | 24 |
| Limiter: an electronic device which monitors the level (signal
strength) of a signal. When the level reaches a threshold, usually
controllable by you by means of a knob, the limiter prevents the
signal from getting any louder. Sort of a safety valve for expensive
speakers and amps and can also be used in recording to prevent
distortion.
Crossover: takes a signal and splits it into two or more signals,
according to frequency. For example, one can use a crossover to
take the bass frequencies from a signal (say 125Hz and below) and send
it to amps/speakers suited for bass frequences (like 500watt BGW's and
15in speakers). The frequency at which the split(s) occur is usually
adjustable. There are crossovers that work on line-level signals (such
as the signal that comes out of a mixing console) or speaker-level
signals (if you opened up one of your stereo speakers you might see
a bunch of coils and capacitors...that's a speaker level crossover
because it 'listens' to the power amp).
Bi-amping: Use a crossover to send appropriate frequencies to
appropriate gear. To do that you need two amps: one for highs and one
for lows. A sound system or guitar rig set up like this is defined as
'bi-amped'. You can extend this concept: tri-amping or quad-amped.
Sorry to be so long winded.
|
2282.4 | Use line out to mixer for effects... | VOLKS::RYEN | Rick Ryen 240-6501 AET1-1/A6 | Fri Aug 09 1991 14:24 | 19 |
| Line out;
Here's how I like to use mine. I send it to the
mixing board, panned hard against the location of my
guitar amp. I add quite a bit of reverb, and EQ it for
the high end. It tends to give me a dimensional reverb
sound, that makes my rig sound much bigger than it really
is.
Well, I lied a little bit. It's not really a line out,
but an effect send. I don't use the return. Same thing
though.
Also, I use this for recording, sometimes miking the
guitar amp speaker as well. Using the line-out alone,
enables you to aviod having to use a microphone.
Rick
|
2282.5 | | CHEFS::BRIGGSR | Four Soft Tyres on a Muddy Road | Mon Aug 12 1991 06:50 | 19 |
|
I have some very similar questions to those raised by the base note.
1) Line Out - A fact I've noticed in most musical amplification seems
to be the lack of any, what I would call, 'clean' outputs. For
instance, for optimal quality of recording on hifi systems the output
from the amp is taken before the stages with volume/tone controls. With
guitar/keyoard etc kit, the outputs seem to be controllable by all
volume/tone controls (line out) and the 'quality' seems to suffer. Why
is this?
2) Secondly, use of built in gain seems to me to be a black art. The
amount of distortion seems to be affected by guitar volume control,
gain setting, amp volume control. Furthermore, I can never seem to get
the same overdrive sound twice! I have a Strat and Fender Champ (valve) amp.
Being a valve amp do I need to play LOUD to get a good predictable
distortion? Should guitar volume control always be at max?
Richard
|
2282.6 | | RGB::ROST | If you don't C#, you might Bb | Mon Aug 12 1991 10:41 | 17 |
|
Re: .5
Line out:
In a stereo system, the idea is to have clean reproduction and no
coloration. In guitar amps this is *not* the idea. On a stereo, the
*tape* outs are usually pre-EQ/volume and *line* outs (used for slaving
other amps, inserting EQ/processor devices) are post EQ/volume, as on
guitar amps. Some guitar amps *do* have pre-EQ loops although post -EQ
loops are more common. Many bass amps have pre-EQ direct outs so that
the sound board can recieve a "clean" bass signal unaffected by the
stage amp settings. The *main* reson for a line out (other than an FX
loop) is to slave another power amp, so you would *want* the preamp
colorations.
Brian
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2282.7 | Confused of Reading | CHEFS::BRIGGSR | Four Soft Tyres on a Muddy Road | Fri Aug 16 1991 06:00 | 14 |
|
More questions....
You said "the main use for Line Out (other than for FX loop) is...."
What do you mean by this? Take Line Out feed through an FX box and then
what? FX loops have always confused me. I've always assumed these were
out/in jacks in, what you refer to as pre EQ stage.
I have an Alesis Microverb III unit. I always feed guitar straight in
to this and then feed the output into the amp. Should I be making use
of the Line Out somehow?
Richard
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2282.8 | Line Out PLUS Line In = FX Loop | RGB::ROST | If you don't C#, you might Bb | Fri Aug 16 1991 09:49 | 11 |
| Back before the days of digital FX all over the place, some amps had
*only* line outs, which were used for recording, slaving other amps,
etc. and some amps had *both* line outs and line *ins* which could be
used as an FX loop, or to bypass the preamp and allow using the amp as
a slave.
Now that FX loops are common, you often see jacks for FX out/in *and*
line out/in. Usually the line out is after the FX in, and can be used
as a second loop.
Brian
|