12/10/2023 0 Comments Used piezo guitar![]() It's in excellent condition with really no signs of wear or use. Up for sale we are offering this used PRS SE Hollowbody II Piezo. When using the magnetic output jack in isolation, the piezo battery is bypassed completely, acting as a failsafe (in this scenario, the magnetic pickups still work even if the piezo battery has run out of juice). Alternatively, players can plug into the jacks separately, so the guitar can run magnetic pickups into an amp and run the piezo through an acoustic amp or DI into the soundboard. Players can plug into the “Mix/Piezo” jack and use the individual volume controls to blend the 58/15 LT “S” pickups with the piezo’s acoustic tones. The instrument is designed with two discrete volume controls (magnetics and piezo) and output jacks (mix/piezo and magnetics). The 58/15 LT “S” pickups deliver clarity and balance that sound big and musical in a hollowbody platform.Boasting an LR Baggs/PRS Piezo system, the SE Hollowbody II Piezo provides musicians with the versatility of wielding both acoustic and electric tones in one instrument. Constructed with a maple back and top with mahogany sides, the SE Hollowbody II Piezo offers a light shimmer and snap in an attractive package. If you're looking for nice hollowbody, this is it! It will include the original case and come with a full setup!Here's an overview from PRS:Acoustic and Electric Tones In OneThe SE Hollowbody II Piezo combines the balanced, clear, resonant tone of a hollowbody instrument with the power and stability of a solid-body electric guitar. and get back what sounds like a very nice acoustic guitar, I'm flabbergasted, in a good way.Used PRS SE Hollowbody II Piezo Electric Guitar -Peacock Blue- Paul Reed Smith Electric Guitar Up for sale we are offering this used PRS SE Hollowbody II Piezo. When I hook a '69 J50 to a Fender Blues Jr. Moreover, they work without internal batteries or preamps, into any pre or amp input I've hooked them. That said, I send a heads-up about the K&K Pure Western pickups, which work so much better than any other piezo I've tried that I almost cannot believe it. Haven't enough mileage on it to place it in the race, but it certainly seemed to hold its own. I got to audition a Great River MP2-NV, and I thought it also worked really well. My personal-kit favorite is my Evil Twin, followed by my GTQ2. They can't all be renting the same 2 guitars in NYC! thanks, Greg It seems that any time a rock band does the "acoustic" thing for a videotaping or live TV performance, they show up with 2 acoustic guitars, and one has a great sounding DI and the other has an almost useless tone. I wonder if anybody can recommend a better DI box for recording acoustic guitars (and fiddles and mandolins occasionally) with ultra-high impedance piezo pickups? Currently I use Countryman type 85 boxes, and occasionally Jensen equipped passive DI boxes. Greg Thompson wrote on Thu, 06 January 2005 07:09 I'd hate to invest that much in a pre and have to leave it out on the stage where the musos and the cameramen can stomp all over it. Thanks Fibes, but the GTQ-2 is a little rich for my budget and application. I was wondering if there was a specific brand of DI like the BSS, or Radial JDI that was designed to interface with really high impedances of the piezo pickups. Usually I'll throw up an SM-81, but depending on the bleed and the players' ability to stay put when I place the mic, results vary greatly. Fishman makes a clip that holds a mini-mic and clamps onto a brace or strut inside the guitar. ![]() If its for video, and stage volume is not a big issue, maybe some clip on mini-condenser mics would be better than a pickup. Probably because I don't trust them to not trip over the cable and "enlarge" the soundhole. ![]() Yikes.Ī friend lent me a drop-in pickup that I could throw in the soundhole. I have seen clip-on models for bass, I'm sure there are things for acoustic guitars that don't require a drill. Maybe you could provide your own DI solutions for them. A fair amount of bands don't travel with their own backline when they're doing these one-off things, so we're both faced with trying to make do with what's provided. Often I'm faced with "you gotta do what you gotta do" in these situations. Well if the guy shows up with a crappy pickup, how much can you expect to improve it with a better direct box ?
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