New set of ENR71 halfrounds are sticky. Not like sugar sticky, but an oily kind of sticky. Strange. Is there anything I can do, or product I can use to clean the strings? I just put these on my fretless and the slides are NOT smooth at all. Help!
Thanks, >Klee
Re: New set of ENR71 halfrounds are sticky. Not like...
Isoprophyl alcohol, 91% should clean them. You could also use CRC226 available at Home Depot in the electrical dept. as it will also protect the strings.
Thanks Fredy2. The alcohol did seem to clean them off some. And by the end of the first gig they are starting to improve. Now time to pay attention to other aspects of these new wires, like tone and sustain. So far, so good... >K|eebassThanks Fredy2. The alcohol did seem to clean them off some. And by the end of the first gig they are starting to improve. Now time to pay attention to other aspects of these new wires, like tone and sustain. So far, so good... >K|eebass
You can't post conmments that contain an email address.
- If you need clarification, ask it in the comment box above.
- Better answers use proper spelling and grammar.
- Provide details, support with references or personal experience.
Tell us some more! Your answer needs to include more details to help people.You can't post answers that contain an email address.Please enter a valid email address.The email address entered is already associated to an account.Login to postPlease use English characters only.
Tip: The max point reward for answering a question is 15.
Marshall are very good amp. but when it gets faulty its a headache. kindly get a technician and check the amp part or anr dry joint from the capacitors due to vibration and age.
Sounds like a bad rotary encoder (the part that the "dial" is attached to"). If the circuit board or solder is not cracked in that area then that is likely the problem. You could find the part at mouser.com (about $1) and would need desolder the bad encoder and solder the new one in place or get the whole PCBA(printed circuit board assembly) from Korg.
Dear crane_editor,
For broadcasting the video signal coming from the V-8 over the internet you need to have a computer that is equipped with a composite or S-Video input card. Additionally you might need an audio input as well with the possibility to delay the audio to have a live stream with lipsync audio and video.
Roland has launched a new product recently which is actually designed for live streaming applicatons like this. It's called VR-5 AV Mixer & Recorder. This device has a USB streaming output for easy connecting with a computer. The computer will recognize the VR-5 as a USB audio/video class device (like a webcam) so your setup is ready in minutes.
Further the VR-5 is equipped with an audio mixer (with delay for lip sync), built-in preview screens with touch select, PC VGA input, media player and AV recorder (SD card).
Probably the VR-5 covers all of your needs, without the hassle of difficult configuration of all kinds of separate devices.
Kind regards,
Kees
I can't be sure for the result at your area, but I have to tell you that whenever I rebuild speakers at technicians in Greece (that's my country), the results were not very good. They always worked but after some working period started to make strange noices. Especially if you are a mucisian and the amplifier is yourself, replace them.
In case of a problem or clarification, don't hesitate to post me a reply. If you are satisfied, rate my solution with the "thumbs".
Thanks and regards Please kindly rate this solution Stelios direct FixYa link: http://www.fixya.com/users/technical114
Here is a site that has PR15 fuses... shown as a 2.1 amp. Very strange value, and it must strictly be for the tweeter portion as 2.1 amps is nothing for a speaker... I don't know that I believe this site.
If you have a Guitar Center near you, inquire there.
Hi. I saw this looking for info on the C3500 of which I own one myself. I don't know the answer to your question but I found a site where you may buy a downloadable c350 service manual for $45. Go here, http://www.musicparts.com/products.asp?Company=Korg.
First, you need to select one of the patches called "init patch", it won't have a drumbeat on it. Then, turn the guide on again, then all the way off. Even if the knob's in the off position when you go to the patch, it'll turn itself on again by default. There's a light there that says "beat quantize" that you want to be off, or it'll cut your loop to the length of whatever beat it's set to. If you want to change the default, turn the beat quantize off, then press "write" and write the new patch. Hope that helps.
×