This can happen and may require opening up the guitar to retighten the loose amp plug fitting from inside.
plug it into an amp
The input socket.
There are many types of guitar effects and volume pedals. The cable from the guitar is plugged into the jack marked IN and another cable is plugged into the one labled OUT and then plugged into the Amplifier.
Through the MIDI (Musical Instruments Digital Interface) port.
No not at all :]
plug it into an amp
Yes, you definitely can.
The input socket.
hahaha dude my amp does the same things. you just have radio interference, but mine does that when you hold a string on a fret.
beasty
There are many types of guitar effects and volume pedals. The cable from the guitar is plugged into the jack marked IN and another cable is plugged into the one labled OUT and then plugged into the Amplifier.
Through the MIDI (Musical Instruments Digital Interface) port.
No not at all :]
no it comes with a speaker built in but if you want you could plug in the amp to make it louder.
If you are using a guitar amp as a pre-amp to a bass amp (plugging your guitar into a guitar amp, and then patching the guitar amp to the bass amp), do not do this. Bass, acoustic guitar, and vocals (mics) are low impedence, where guitars are high impedence. You can very easily damage your equipment doing this sort of thing. If you are trying to get guitar sounds out of a bass amp, in my opinion, it's next to impossible. There is only one type of bass amp that I know of that you can accomplish this with...Ampeg has a series of bass amps with "switchable tweeters", meaning that they come equipped with tweeters, but you can turn them in order to use rig as a bass amp, and turn them on in order to play an acoustic guitar thru the bass amp. Since an acoustic guitar is low impedence, this works fairly well. You can also plug in an electric to this setup, even tho an electric guitar is high impedence...It's possible to plug in a high impedence instrument into a low impedence amp, but it's not advisable to plug in a low impedence instrument into a high impedence amp.
The Behringer iAXE393 USB Guitar will plug straight into a computer, using it as an amp and a recorder. It can still be used with a regular amp or recording hardware.
It doesn't have static "in" it, its just sounds that way when you try to plug it in. If you are getting allot of "noise" then your guitar isn't shielded properly or it isn't grounded properly. The amp may not be earthed or grounded properly. You may need to get the guitar and amp checked at a Guitar store. The lead may be damaged, for example if you can unscrew the end of the lead, the plug, you can see if the solder has broken , then you can get someone to solder, fix it, or if it is a sealed lead, buy a new one.