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paranoid70

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 9, 2007
Messages
2,647
Location
Long Beach, CA
So, our bass player has been rather flakey lately. We had rehearsal without him AGAIN yesterday and this time I tried to fill in on bass. I have a nice Sterling bass that I bought for home recording, but don't have a good practice amp. Thus, I just used my Fender Princeton Chorus guitar amp. Although I am not much of a bass player, it sounded ok (like Motorhead :eek:).

Anyway, my stupid question is, can playing a bass through a guitar amp damage the speakers?
 

patpark

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Joined
Jan 2, 2009
Messages
760
Location
Orange County, CA
yes, the lower frequencies from the bass can push the speaker cones too far and blow he speaker. just watch the volume and make sure your doing low volume and not hitting the strings too hard.
 

ScoobySteve

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Joined
May 1, 2008
Messages
3,309
Location
Busan, Republic of Korea
yes, the lower frequencies from the bass can push the speaker cones too far and blow he speaker. just watch the volume and make sure your doing low volume and not hitting the strings too hard.

This. You'd be much safer practicing/gigging through low volumes with a mic set up in front of it and through to the PA. Tried this with my brother's bass when I first picked up guitar. Thought I might play a lick or two.

Nope, owed my brother $350 for a new amp.

Oh, and OT btw.
 

MrMusashi

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Joined
Mar 26, 2007
Messages
2,840
Location
69 degrees north
plug it directly into the pa.. that will sound better and like the other 2 said: no worries about blowing up that skinnystring amp ;)

MrM
 
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