On Sun, Oct 28, 2007 at 06:45:54PM +0100, leslie.polzer@email-addr-hidden wrote:
> > You cannot do that in a sane way - the output of a guitar pickup needs to be
> > modified (amplified and converted to high impedance) before, otherwise the
> > signal will suffer (treble loss).
>
> I believe you, but I'd be grateful if someone could explain to me how
> one would know that the treble will suffer? I mean, we were talking
> about real impedancies, and to determine how the line will react with
> respect to certain frequencies we would need the complex part...
The impedance of a guitar PU is mostly inductive, i.e. it rises
with frequency. So if you load this with a low impedance the
effect is that of a low-pass filter. That's the simplest case -
in practice the inductance can resonate within the audio band
when connected to a cable (which is capacitive) and this is why
guitar cables can have a distinctive sound.
Anyway, for a guitar you need a high-impedance input, not a
microphone input.
Ciao,
-- FA Laboratorio di Acustica ed Elettroacustica Parma, Italia Lascia la spina, cogli la rosa. _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@email-addr-hidden http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-userReceived on Tue Oct 30 16:15:01 2007
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