Crisis! |
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Crisis! |
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Feb 17 2009, 11:26 PM |
I hope its not your guitar man !
Try going directly to your sound card with guitar cable + converter jack. If you get sound in your DAW then its amp, if not guitar trouble |
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Feb 17 2009, 11:32 PM |
Can you post 2 pictures of your Amp - front and back ?
Perhaps that would give some ideas regarding switches it has etc |
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Feb 18 2009, 12:42 AM |
The guitar electronics should be quite easy to fix. It's probably just a soldering joint that broke off or something. If you can't see it you should check it with a multimeter. The electronics inside of a guitar are normally very simple so it should be easy for you or some friend with soldering skills and a multimeter to fix it. And as long as you don't overheat one of the pots or resistors you can't do much damage. Good luck!
Jonas A This post has been edited by 29a: Feb 18 2009, 12:45 AM -------------------- My Website | My Gear | Elixir Nanoweb Strings Review | Installing Schaller Security Locks
"If privacy is outlawed, only outlaws will have privacy." - Phil Zimmermann |
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Feb 18 2009, 11:02 AM |
Stupid question, you don't use active pickups in that guitar, do you? In that case it might just be the batterie. If not, I also think it is something about the electrics in your guitar, might be a pot, might just be a cable or a short circuit, you should really find somebody to check it, it should not really be expensive to fix this.
-------------------- Guitars: various Gibson Les Pauls / Gibson J 45
Amps: Mesa Boogie Tripple Rectifier / Triaxis / 2:90 Poweramp / Rectocabs Effects: Rocktron Intellifex / Rocktron Xpression Homepage: www.marcussiepen.com www.blind-guardian.com Check out my video lessons! |
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