What does a guitar signal splitter do?

Instrument splitters feed the 1/4″ outputs of guitars or effects pedals to multiple amplifiers, selecting between each one individually or activating them simultaneously.

What is an ABY pedal?

An ABY pedal basically takes the lone signal from your instrument and splits it into two. Those two independent signals can then be sent to multiple amplifiers or sound sources, so you can switch between them for more tonal options.

What is a line selector pedal?

The LS-2 Line Selector pedal represents the easy way to switch settings among several effects devices or amplifiers, or route input and output signals. Two line loops and six looping modes provide a wide variety of applications.

What is a true bypass pedal?

With a true bypass pedal, when the pedal is in bypass mode (off), the guitar signal is routed directly to the guitar amplifier without any of the interference, loading, or buffering effects that are often caused by the pedals that are in-between. This is most audible when playing with high gain or distorted amp tones.

What makes the ge601 guitar pedal so good?

The GE601 also features buffered, JFET bypass switching with a low impedance output, meaning it plays well with long cable lengths or other effect units without loss of treble clarity. There is only 12dB of boost/cut on tap for each frequency band, meaning that it’s less suited to extreme adjustments.

What should I look for in a guitar pedal?

Get freq-y. Most pedals you buy come with some sort of EQ management – anything from a simple tone knob to a set of bass, mid and treble controls. Even the most ‘transparent’ effect will have an impact on the frequencies present in your sound.

When did the seven band guitar pedals come out?

It’s been around since the 1980s, and not without reason. It’s seven bands focus on the low-midrange, offering control between 100Hz and 6.4kHz.

How does an A / B switch box work on a guitar?

A/B Switch Box. Your guitar is input with one output channel to your amp, the other to the input of your electronic tuner. This is a very popular use for passive A/B Switches. Example 2 is to split your signal into two amps. With this box, you would be choosing the signal to go to either amp A or amp B.