Anything from 15 to 50W is plenty.
Ask the drummer to put a pillow in his bass drum and put a piece of duct tape on the underside of each of his heads and cymbals.
2007-03-29 12:38:23
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answer #1
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answered by bikeworks 7
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I have a 75 watt amp for both my bass and my guitar and you can hear it above the drums. But you can also buy an external speaker box for about 75% and wire your control box from your existing amp to that and it works pretty good. Thats what ive been doing for about a year now. But a 75 should do the trick without having to blow out your speaker trying to get it loud enough.
2007-03-27 04:43:27
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answer #2
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answered by Stoner 1
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Fro basement jamming in a normal-sized basement room (12' x 12' to 12' x 25'), 15 to 25 Watts is more than enough.
For performance on stage in an auditorium or lounge room, you will need more -- 100 Watts. For concerts in large venues -- even more power, or a tie-in to the PA system
,
2007-03-27 04:40:34
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answer #3
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answered by tlbs101 7
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in case you place the quantity way up, then in all risk. It won't sound very stable nonetheless for the reason which you're attempting to compete with drums utilising a mattress room practice amp. i could advise omit that anyhow. look out for a Peavey Bandit 112. I have been given one used at guitar midsection for $a hundred and twenty. 80-one hundred watts, adjustable wattage, and first rate tone. they are equipped like tanks and usually worry-free to locate. it is not a modeling amp, so which you will not have as many innovations, yet truly who makes use of all of them? Spider distortion is meh anyhow.
2016-11-23 19:12:31
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answer #4
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answered by ? 3
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100w on up should be good
2007-03-27 04:40:29
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answer #5
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answered by Imperia Studios 4
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