My Sony VAIO T250's microphone input has a built-in overdrive/distortion circuit, lol...just listen to these. The pickup names are in quotes because they're the Duncan Design ones in my H207 7-string. I just recorded a simple thing to compare the tones, I thought it was kinda funny that it did this.
quot;Jazzquot; normal
from : localhost/media.putfile.com/dd_jazz_normal
quot;JBquot; normal
from : localhost/media.putfile.com/dd_jb_normal
quot;Jazzquot; mic boost
from : localhost/media.putfile.com/dd_jazz_mic_boost
quot;JBquot; mic boost
from : localhost/media.putfile.com/dd_jb_mic_boost
Damn you discovered my discovery
its even better when you run the resulting sound from a headphone slot to a transister amp clean channel to amplify it
my formula for success:
Rage 158 1998 Compaq Presario ****y computer speakers= Cranck It!!!
how'd you do the mic boost
oh by the way keep doing that and kiss you computer speakers goodbye in a couple of months believe me i speak from experience
Also works with the mic input of some amps...
Those clips sound like a bad fuzz pedal to me. But it's pretty cool that the laptop has that boost... I wonder what it would be used for?
It does sound bad, and tapping doesn't work haha but I thought in a pinch it was cool you could just hook your guitar up if you were making something up on the spot and it was cool.Umm, it just makes microphones louder.
Originally Posted by D-EJ915It does sound bad, and tapping doesn't work haha but I thought in a pinch it was cool you could just hook your guitar up if you were making something up on the spot and it was cool.
Yeah but i use it because i had the cables laying around so i got the distortion for free
- Dec 17 Thu 2009 20:55
Sony laptop's input does overdrive/distortion
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