A guitar amp works by taking an electrical signal from a guitar and turning it into sound waves. It has 3 parts to it. The first is the Input, which is the guitar cable plugged into the amp's input jack, sending the signal to the preamp. The second is the Preamp, which is the first stage of the circuit, where the tone of the guitar is shaped using knobs for bass, mid, treble, and gain. The third is the Power amp, which receives the signal from the preamp and amplifies it to a much larger version. The power amp uses transistors or vacuum tubes to amplify the signal. The actual speaker can help with all these parts as well to make the guitar's AMP work.
Figure 3: A Fender brands guitar's AMP
Figure 3 as you can see from the caption and the picture shows a guitar’s AMP for the basic version mostly. This is where you would in general plug in your guitar and usiuseg the controls. I will be explaining that later in this section and what they do as well. Size & Dimensions for Figure 3: 7.5 inches (HEIGHT) by 11.5 inches (WIDTH) by 13.7 inches (DEPTH)
For the specs of the guitar's AMP you have to consider which one you want to get with these 5 factors for your guitar and where you would be playing to use the AMP. The 5 factors are the wattage, the speaker size, the AMP type, the controls and finally the type of music you will play and where.
This guide above share pics and screenshots on how to use an amp, some features to the amp, some supplies or stuff you need to make the amp work, what different switches do, what the switches look like on the amp from figure 3, the different steps for this version of an amp for an electric guitar. As well BELOW is a chart about the guitar’s amp for basic information on the actual product. You can look up this and then look through the amp guide ABOVE.
Fender's AMP Information:
Have you learned something for this page about Sounds into Signals? Mark that you have done so on the icon BELOW.
Done reading?