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Electric Guitar Mechanics

How Does an Electric Guitar Work?

 

There are many different kinds of guitars, such as acoustic, semi-acoustic (also called electric acoustic), hollow body, jumbo guitars and more. Guitars can be one of many different shapes, sizes and colors and are used in a variety of musical styles, such as country music, rock and roll, jazz and latin.

An acoustic guitar is made of six parts - the strings, the sound box, the bridge, the fret board, tuning keys and the guitar neck. The neck has a guitar nut and headstock. The strings are made from nylon wire or metal and stretch the length of the guitar. Most guitars have six strings although this can vary. The strings run parallel and have a small space between them. The strings create the sound from the guitar by vibrating along their length. The guitar strings are held in place by the guitar bridge on one end and the guitar nut at the other end and are held using tension to make them taut. You pluck the strings with a plectrum or your fingers to make the sound vibrations. This is how to play both an acoustic and an electric guitar.

An electric guitar differs from a traditional acoustic model in a number of ways. It was first developed for the reason that an acoustic guitar cannot product high quality sound when played very loudly. For example, in a concert or where there is a large audience. An electric guitar can product a high volume at high quality and without sound distortion. Rock and roll bands required tone and character definition in their guitar music, which was not being met by acoustic guitars, so the electric guitar was developed to overcome this problem.

An acoustic guitar uses a sound box to product the sounds. An electric guitar uses electricity to transmit the sounds produced. You use a tuning pen to tune its six strings. An electric guitar has a long neck and a number of frets. The body of the electric guitar is normally made from solid wood and magnetic pickups produce the sounds. Common types of pickups include piezo electric, magnetic, condensor pickups and there are more. The knobs at the end of the neck control the pickups. The electric guitar uses the pickup to sense the vibrations of the strings electronically and sends them as an electronic signal to the amplifier, which sends them on to the speakers. The sound can be altered to suit the guitarist. There is a volume control on the guitar itself and tone control knobs to change the sound tonality. These knobs give you plenty of flexibility on modifying the sound from your guitar to suit yourself and your desired genre of music.

 

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