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what is the scientific explanation for how a bass guitar makes sound.

2007-04-19 10:47:07 · 4 answers · asked by N_A_D_NMYF 2 in Entertainment & Music Music

4 answers

well basically sound is made from vibrations. your vocal chords vibrate and then your mouth changes the sound by the shape of you lips/placement of tongue. So it is very simple. the strings are extra big to provide enough tension at low levels. as you pluck the string it vibrates. then the pickups on electrics have little magnets that act as microphones and pick up the sound and send it to your amp and bang you have sound. the body and wood tha paint and shape, whether its hollow or solid they all have an effect on the sound. so just that is basicaly it.

2007-04-19 10:53:00 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

When you took all of the strings off, the truss rod that's meant to stability the anxiety could have warped the neck backwards. Now you could have placed them again, they'll be catching at the frets everywhere the position. Leave it with the strings tuned four or five frets too top for a few days, and spot in the event that they pull it again into line. If now not, take it to a respectable to re-hooked up. The dangerous information is, my Squier Strat on no account went again to the way it used to be after I loosened all of the strings to repair an electric predicament, so I are not able to promise yours will.

2016-09-05 17:42:49 · answer #2 · answered by spies 4 · 0 0

Electric? or Acoustic

Electric (and this applies to regular guitars, as well). When the string is plucked it vibrates. As is vibrates across the magnetic poles of the pickup, the magnetic field of the magnets causes small electrical currents to flow in the area around the pickup (you can't even feel them with your fingers). These are called Eddy currents (like eddys of swirling water in a river).

These Eddy currents likewise cause a magnetic field, because the string is vibrating, and cause current to flow in the pickup coil of wire. That current is forced out of the guitar (as in a voltage) to the amplifier. The current alternates with the vibration of the string -- whatever note you play, and how hard you pluck the string -- mimicking the note and size of the vibration.

Scientifically:
The 2nd part is backed up by Faraday's Law
The 1st part is backed up by Ampere's and Faraday's law
.

2007-04-19 10:57:26 · answer #3 · answered by tlbs101 7 · 0 0

Induction. Among other things.

2007-04-19 10:50:02 · answer #4 · answered by Matthew L 4 · 0 0

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