Band Equalizer Eqa

BBE EQA231 EQA 231 31 Band Graphic Equalizer Brand New! BBE EQA231 EQA 231 31 Band Graphic Equalizer Brand New! Paypal US $199.99 8d 18h 1m
BBE EQA231 EQA 231 31 Band Graphic Equalizer New! BBE EQA231 EQA 231 31 Band Graphic Equalizer New! Paypal US $199.99 4d 15h 42m
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Band Equalizer Eqa



BBE EQA231 EQA 231 31 Band Graphic Equalizer Brand New! BBE EQA231 EQA 231 31 Band Graphic Equalizer Brand New! Paypal US $199.99 8d 18h 1m
BBE EQA231 EQA 231 31 Band Graphic Equalizer New! BBE EQA231 EQA 231 31 Band Graphic Equalizer New! Paypal US $199.99 4d 15h 42m
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Clarion 700EQA 7 Band Equalizer Amplifier - Max Power Output - 50Watts - Full Front/Rear Fade Capability for 4 Speaker Systems - ETMB - No manual included Clarion 700EQA 7 Band Equalizer Amplifier - Max Power Output - 50Watts - Full Front/Rear Fade Capability for 4 Speaker Systems - ETMB - No manual included

List Price: $49.99

 

Description

Clarion 700EQA 7 Band Equalizer Amplifier - Max Power Output - 50Watts - Full Front/Rear Fade Capability for 4 Speaker Systems - No manual included

Teac EQA-120 10 Band Graphic Equalizer Teac EQA-120 10 Band Graphic Equalizer

 




Teac EQA-20 10 band equalizer

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3 Responses
  1. dragon breath says:

    the main thing is that you get a good name brand eq because cheap eq's also add distortion and noise to the sound. look for high sensitivity ( 105db or more ).

    to Joe;
    no body here can help the fact that you now drive a honda fit and are jealous of people who still can hook up their cars. misery loves company, huh?

  2. Fred196407 says:

    good respect to a great song

  3. Saul says:

    An equalizer can boost or cut your sounds different frequencies. For instance, the Hi/Mid/Low aka Treble/Mid/Bass knobs on your amp – those are equalizer aka EQ controls.

    Each band represents a range of frequencies. More bands = more control over your sound.

    For instance, let's say you have a muddy low end and want to pull it down a bit, or your treble is a little too shrieky. A three or four band control (like the knobs or that 4 band EQ on the amp) may be just the thing to make a general tonal correction like that. If, however, you want to just scoop out your sound from 300-600 hz and leave everything else, then most likely you will need more control than 4 bands – usually closer to 7 or 10, or possibly even more.

    What many players don't realize is how subtle and how powerful EQ can be, especially when you start talking high-gain high-distortion. Let's say you pickups have too much bass, and its causing your sound to be muddy and fuzzy. You could buy a new amp, or buy new pickups…. or you could just use an EQ pedal to cut some of that bass and maybe add some treble, etc to balance out the sound.

    I see a lot of players go from one piece of equipment to another to another…. the guy with six distortion pedals, complaining that none of them gave him the sound he wanted…. huh? Seriously? Putting an EQ after a distortion pedal is one of the best ways to get new life out of it… you can take a Danelectro Fab Tone (a cheapo distortion fuzz pedal), slap an EQ pedal after it, and get tones that approximate a Boss Metal Zone (i've done it).

    Anyways, EQ can be a very good thing, especially when your sound is *almost-but-not-quite* right.

    What EQ cannot do, though, is make a Squier sound like a Gibson. So if the basic tone of the amp blows, then no amount of EQ can correct that.

    Good luck – play before you buy!

    Saul