Bass Practice Amp
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
Bass Practice Amp
I just put together a little system for private practice that might be of interest.
After some net research, I bought a ZOOM 506II effects box, which doubles as a headphone amp. It runs on 4 AA batteries and has a built in tuner. It is about 5" X 6" X 1.5" in size. In the tuner position, all effects are bypassed. The output is stereo, so all common headsets are immediately useable.
I stick the box in a little belt pack, plug in the headset and the bass and can wander around the house or out on the patio practicing without bothering anyone.
The sound in the tuner (bypass) position seems to be about the same as I get from my amp/cab and it sure is lighter to carry!
For travel, I have a little Kramer headless bass with a hard case that is about as big a a trumpet case. The box and the headset fit neatly into this case with the bass, so I have an instant practice facility wherever I go.
After some net research, I bought a ZOOM 506II effects box, which doubles as a headphone amp. It runs on 4 AA batteries and has a built in tuner. It is about 5" X 6" X 1.5" in size. In the tuner position, all effects are bypassed. The output is stereo, so all common headsets are immediately useable.
I stick the box in a little belt pack, plug in the headset and the bass and can wander around the house or out on the patio practicing without bothering anyone.
The sound in the tuner (bypass) position seems to be about the same as I get from my amp/cab and it sure is lighter to carry!
For travel, I have a little Kramer headless bass with a hard case that is about as big a a trumpet case. The box and the headset fit neatly into this case with the bass, so I have an instant practice facility wherever I go.
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shinynewtoy
- Intermediate Member
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- Joined: Fri May 27, 2005 7:46 pm
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shinynewtoy
- Intermediate Member
- Posts: 1347
- Joined: Fri May 27, 2005 7:46 pm
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rickaddict
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- Joined: Mon Mar 29, 2004 7:46 am
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shinynewtoy
- Intermediate Member
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- Joined: Fri May 27, 2005 7:46 pm
Bob - since that post, I have indeed used the BassPODxt several times while on the road. It is amazingly good at making the bass I'm playing sound bigger than life in headphones.
If I could just figure out a way to mix in a CD signal with the BassPODxt bassline, in my headphones... I could use it to silently rehearse songs from our set list, as well as try out sounds and basslines for original ideas we've burned to CD. Any ideas on how to pull this off??
If I could just figure out a way to mix in a CD signal with the BassPODxt bassline, in my headphones... I could use it to silently rehearse songs from our set list, as well as try out sounds and basslines for original ideas we've burned to CD. Any ideas on how to pull this off??
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shinynewtoy
- Intermediate Member
- Posts: 1347
- Joined: Fri May 27, 2005 7:46 pm
I haven't tried that one with headphones yet. When I want to work on a bassline for something, I just plug into the board and mix the signal going into the computer. (Gadgets are cool.) But as for a cd... I'm stumped!
My wife's Korg Toneworks has a CD in... Line 6 missed the boat on that one.
My wife's Korg Toneworks has a CD in... Line 6 missed the boat on that one.
What do you mean the Bass is too loud???
"If I could just figure out a way to mix in a CD signal with the BassPODxt bassline, in my headphones... I could use it to silently rehearse songs from our set list, as well as try out sounds and basslines for original ideas we've burned to CD. Any ideas on how to pull this off??"
Any mixer would do this. Bass goes into one input, the CD player in another, plug in your headphones, and you're all set. Behringer makes some very inexpensive mixers.
Any mixer would do this. Bass goes into one input, the CD player in another, plug in your headphones, and you're all set. Behringer makes some very inexpensive mixers.
If it ain't broke, break it, then fix it.

