I doubt drilling and filling holes will do anything to the sound..Oh, then I'm lost. Probably just a simple nut adjustment, or maybe raise the bridge a little bit on the bottom string side?
I'm considering putting wheels on my cab however I'm worried that it will hurt the resonance or the general sound of the cab due to the drilling/putting holes where there were no holes before? Is this a problem, or will it be fine?
Also, why do people put their cabs on their sides while playing gigs? Is it for better low end, as I've heard?
douchebags.... it may 'sound' like it has more bass to them but only because the speakers are aiming at their legs not their ears. although using a straight front cab WILL give you more bottom end. go figure.Also, why do people put their cabs on their sides while playing gigs? Is it for better low end, as I've heard?
No its a neck thru design.I didn't notice the word bass, that throws a spanner in the works. Hopefully it is a bolt on neck.
There are no feet on it, its just flat on the ground which is why I was concerned that the bottom may not be thick enough to drill castors into?Is it fret buzz richo? Or is something loose and resonating?
No Matt, replacing the feet with castors will not make a huge sonic difference.
Laying on the side also gives a greater contact surface with the ground. I guess that may give an illusion of greater bass response, but best way is give it a shot.
So you play the A string and then fret the E string and the A buzzes? Which E string are you talking about? If it is the Low E check your technique, is your finger interfering with the A string? If it is the high E maybe you have a loose fret but if that was the case your low E would buzz as well when you fret the high E.Yeah it makes sense, but not for the situation.
The A string, buzzes only when a certain fret is held down on the E string.
Yeah I think it's something loose, and it's the Low E.So you play the A string and then fret the E string and the A buzzes? Which E string are you talking about? If it is the Low E check your technique, is your finger interfering with the A string? If it is the high E maybe you have a loose fret but if that was the case your low E would buzz as well when you fret the high E.
As suggested already check you have nothing loose on the guitar rattle is often confused for buzzing.
You could be onto something there. How secure is your nut?Oh, and as I said before, the weirdest thing is it only happens when I fret the Low E at the 10th fret and play the A string open.
Or when I fret Low E at tenth, and A string on the 12th (octave) which leads me to believe it's some resonance issue
Nuts can work them selves loose from time to time - depending on how well they were initially installed. Considering the buzz is there when the string is open and only when a different string is fretted, its sounds like it's a resonance issue at the nut. I've never reset a nut myself (I always have a techy do all that stuff for me0, but doing it certainly wouldnt hurt.It's... secure?
I don't know.
If I play with a capo on or just behind the nut the buzz goes away..