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Post by GuitarZ on Jul 19, 2008 11:32:24 GMT -7
I've been wondering about this, and someone had a similar question in the Air Brake section.
When you are switching between attenuation levels on the Air Brake, should the amp be in stand-by mode, off (if it's a Ghia), or just have the guitar or amp volume turned down so no sound is going through?
And if you should be in stand-by or off, how long should wait before you change the attenuation?
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Post by Rik on Jul 19, 2008 13:54:57 GMT -7
I change mine all the time with amp dimed or close to it and have no problems. I could be wrong but I don't think you need to worry about stand-by, turning it down or anything else. Just change the Air Brake as needed.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on Jul 19, 2008 17:33:03 GMT -7
I change mine all the time with amp dimed or close to it and have no problems. I could be wrong but I don't think you need to worry about stand-by, turning it down or anything else. Just change the Air Brake as needed. +1
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Post by hwyman on Jul 20, 2008 8:35:44 GMT -7
I'll be interested to hear what the experts say myself - I've been switching mine with the amp on, and haven't noticed any negative effects. Hope I'm not potentially screwing something up by doing it!
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Post by GuitarZ on Jul 20, 2008 17:39:28 GMT -7
So, it sounds like I'm the anal one. I always switch the amp to stand-by or off for the Ghia before I change it. It's a bit of a pain in a playing situation. I think that I need to loosen up a bit.
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Post by benttop (Steve) on Jul 21, 2008 7:57:11 GMT -7
I just reach over and switch it. Normally you're not sounding a note if one hand is over there switching the thing anyway.
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