I don't think your test is very accurate. As most middle school students would've learned in class, in every experiment there can only be one veriable at a time or the results will not be accurate. In this experiment the intended veriable is the violin used, however you are changing your distance every time, which makes the closer one read louder. Since the control, or in this case the acoustic violin, and the (250?) is closest, these are louder than the others. You should mark a spot on the fl
BTW, a request: how about putting all these silent and otherwise non-acoustic violins through an amp in a side-by-side test? I know the "true electric" instruments like the Wood will sound like electrics, but folks on a budget might like to know what the cheaper non-acoustic violins sound like "fully electrified." Can they sound like a violin? Can they sound like a rock violin? Or do they just sound blah?
@Realitytourist Actually, the Yamaha instruments are 'true electrics' as are all the makes and models we carry. Any electric violin or even an acoustic with a pickup can be put through a signal processor to be made to sound like rock violins. The quality of the signal and the tonal properties change with the type and quality of pickup used.
can you put up a video of the fourness fuse's sound with and without an amp and do the same thing with a ted brewer 4 string vivo
MikusSister1 5 months ago in playlist More videos from ElectricViolinShop
I don't think your test is very accurate. As most middle school students would've learned in class, in every experiment there can only be one veriable at a time or the results will not be accurate. In this experiment the intended veriable is the violin used, however you are changing your distance every time, which makes the closer one read louder. Since the control, or in this case the acoustic violin, and the (250?) is closest, these are louder than the others. You should mark a spot on the fl
suoupavlichenko1 10 months ago
@suoupavlichenko1 I agree..
Violianom 9 months ago
Very interesting, thanks! Does the metal mute effect the electric violins at all?
Samlaren 10 months ago
wow...that very helpful. I thought it would be more 'silent'
fmacoful 10 months ago
Can you play a yamaha electric violin on stage with a guitar amplifyer?
ScottAndHisGuitarr 1 year ago
@ScottAndHisGuitarr Yes, I play my Yamaha SV-255 amplified with guitar distortion. Check out my video clip at HeavyMetalViolinDOTcom
archtopaddict 10 months ago
BTW, a request: how about putting all these silent and otherwise non-acoustic violins through an amp in a side-by-side test? I know the "true electric" instruments like the Wood will sound like electrics, but folks on a budget might like to know what the cheaper non-acoustic violins sound like "fully electrified." Can they sound like a violin? Can they sound like a rock violin? Or do they just sound blah?
Realitytourist 1 year ago
@Realitytourist Actually, the Yamaha instruments are 'true electrics' as are all the makes and models we carry. Any electric violin or even an acoustic with a pickup can be put through a signal processor to be made to sound like rock violins. The quality of the signal and the tonal properties change with the type and quality of pickup used.
ElectricViolinShop 7 months ago
That was certainly a noisy environment for that test, I heard someone talking in the background.
Realitytourist 1 year ago
wut song is that at the beginning?
wtfbuds 1 year ago
Comment removed
2johnjohn2 1 year ago