A guitar thats an aural and electric guitar at indistinguishable time?
Answers: The right answer is no, there is not a guitar that sounds similar to an acoustic minus an amp but plays like an electric near an amp.
Here's why:
Acoustic guitars and Electric guitars have different sustain and tone characteristics. Acoustics are designed to vibrate and product the nouns outwardly, robbing sustain. Electric guitars are meant to hold sustain and blast the nouns through the pickups, which takes away any auditory properties.
Electro-acoustic guitars sound similar to acoustic guitars when plugged into an amp. Semi-acoustic (or semihollow or hollowbodies) guitars are electric guitars that contribute you a more mello, bluesy sound. They do not really present out any sound when played minus an amp.
The string tension and collar structure of an acoustic are immensely different from those of an electric. Acoustic necks are usually thicker and the fretboard is flatter. Electric neck (with the exception of a few Gibsons) have adulterate necks and slightly curved fretboards. This change the playability dramaticly.
This is what you can find though. You can get an aural pickup put into the bridge of an electric guitar. This will give you an auditory sound when you plug it into an amp and switch it to that pickup. You can hang on to other electric pickups on your guitar so you can still play electric-sounding music.
You can also get an aural simulator pedal from Boss or digitech for the same effect (using an electric guitar), with the sole purpose cheaper.
Keep this in mind: An electric guitar is exactly that, an electric. It will never steal on the characteristics of any other kind.
An auditory guitar sounds like an aural. It will never sound resembling an electric.
The hybrid guitars still sound approaching the type of guitar that it is: Electro-acoustics sound close to acoustics, but only louder through an amp. Semi-acoustics nouns like electrics, single more mello (they wont have that spikey nouns found on solid bodies).
What I would recommend is going to a Guitar Center or local music store and play a few acoustics and a few electrics and get one of respectively.
I might add that adjectives of the answers above me are wrong, completely.
its called a semi aural look it up online,
The answers post by the user, for information only, CeQnA.com does not guarantee the right.
Related Questions :