Am Samstag, 20. Oktober 2007 schrieb Leslie P. Polzer:
You cannot do that in a sane way - the output of
a guitar pickup needs to be
modified (amplified and converted to high impedance) before, otherwise the
signal will suffer (treble loss).
Does that still hold if I use the Line-In instead of the Mic-In?
Yes. I was speaking of line in, that's where you need a preamp, on mic in your
pickup signal might be a bit to hot already, but in any case the impedance of the
guitar pickup is too high (sorry i wrongly said "converted to high", meant
"to low"
above, see
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DI_unit for a good explanation).
A guitar amp with line out, or certain guitar
FX processors will do, or you can try to find some cheaper device, look for at
least a impedance converter(transformer), or an active (battery powered) D/I box
with built in amplifier.
Any recommendations for a cheap device that just does the job nicely?
not really; any active DI-Box will do, e.g.Behringer has cheap ones. Personally I
use either my Roland GR-33 guitar synth (has built-in speaker simulation too), a
cheap and small marshall valve-state guitar amp or an ancient Roland analog synth
with pitch to voltage converter(P/V synth SPV 355, great stuff :)), or the (also
ancient) Ibanez DM1000 12bit 19" delay processor for my electric guitars, and a
Fishbone Preamp for the piezo pickup in one of my classical guitars.
Edgar