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Blue Posted on Jan 19, 2012
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How do i plug a dbx 131 EQ to a line 6 hd 147 guitar amp head?

All are 1/4 plug ins, in and out.

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Ifixstufff

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  • Expert 232 Answers
  • Posted on Sep 20, 2014
Ifixstufff
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Out puts always goto inputs....is there an insert point on this guitar amp?

3 Related Answers

Anonymous

  • 10594 Answers
  • Posted on Oct 09, 2008

SOURCE: manual for dbx eq system set-up

Check out 12 Series User Manual might help you.

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Rob Beech

  • 63 Answers
  • Posted on Mar 28, 2009

SOURCE: How do I up Receiver/EQ/Amp?

In the order you state them.

Receiver, EQ, Amplifier,

These graphic eq's and the amplifiers are pin 2 hot on the XLR by default (which is the norm) unlike some other makes. Handy to know when making up cables from receivers like this.

Anonymous

  • 8546 Answers
  • Posted on Jan 10, 2011

SOURCE: how do you connect the

Be advised that the engagement of any device in a Tape Monitor loop on a late-model Audio/Video Receiver will effectively tie the receiver down to stereo-only analog sound reproduction. I'll explain.

The connections themselves are fairly simple but it pays to understand what happens in the loop.

In general, any Line-Level external processor (EQ, dynamic range expander, etc) will go into a Tape Monitor loop on a receiver. A Tape Monitor, when engaged, sends the stereo analog signal Out to the Processor, massages it and returns it to the receiver via the Tape Monitor IN connectors to be passed on to the receiver's internal processes (volume, tone, whatever).

Old school analog stereo-only receivers consistently work this way. Newer digital and audio/video receivers introduce a couple of problems: 1) digital sound processing to simulate a variety of soundfields; 2) multiple output channels, either discrete or digitally-generated.

The latter requires that whatever signal is being processed experiences a maximum of one analog-digital-analog conversion.

EVERYTHING analog coming into the modern digital receiver is automatically convert ed to a digital signal for internal processing unless you choose a STEREO-only or STEREO-Direct setting. Consequently, no further external analog-digital conversions would be allowed if, say, a Tape Monitor circuit was activated, and a possible feedback loop could otherwise be created in a digital-sourced selection (output to its own input), so the unit is wired to treat the Tape Monitor as the first analog step in the process and defeats any pure digital sources.

In a multichannel unit, what would happen to the other channels if you sent ONLY the Front Left & Right out for processing? They would NOT be processed. That logical problem also plays into the decision to defeat digital sources if the Tape Monitor is activated. I don't totally agree with the engineers but that's the way it is. Nature of the digital beast.

Okay, back to the hook-up: Receiver Tape- or VCR Out to the External Processor (EQ, whatever) Preamp-, Amp-, Tape- or Rec-In; Receiver Tape- or VCR In from the External Processor (EQ, whatever) Preamp-, Amp-, Tape- or Rec-Out.

So, to sum up, you can only use the EQ for analog stereo sources. If you actually want to use an analog recording deck you could place it within the typical Equalizer's own Tape Monitor loop(s). Many have two to facilitate equalized dubbing between decks.

[Or you could obtain a dbx Program Route Selector (check eBay, I highly recommend the 400x, of which I have two) and it would, while only using one receiver Tape Loop, allow for three discrete attachment paths for processors and three for tape decks with the added flexibility of front-panel selection of any and all, with the processors being before, after or between the source or tape decks. Plus it has a dedicated facility for an inline dbx Noise Reduction Processor that can also be juggled around via pushbuttons. Pretty neat.]

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1answer

Line 6 how do i get it to work

Line 6 connected to AC power and LED showing power to unit. Guitar into effect input, effect output to guitar amp. Does guitar make sound through amp in bypass mode? No then check cables...yes then use foot switch to turn Line 6 effects unit on. Adjust control knobs for desired effect levels/settings.

If pedal provides no effects...off/on switch defective or internal electronics in need of repair.
1helpful
1answer

I tried to plug in a digitech bp200 pedal and then my amp went on the fritz and starterd buzzing loudly. I attempted using the effects loop section on the back of the amp with my bass direct into the amp,...

DO NOT try a guitar pedal as an effects insert via the back jacks... they are for an external line level EQ/Effects type unit. Your guitar pedal should NOT have caused any damage. Check the power adapter you are using with the BP200. The BP200 takes a 9 VAC adapter, NOT a 9VDC type common to most pedals. You cannot use one of the Pedal Train type supplies with the BP200. Also check that you have the in's and out's correct on the pedal... backwards and they will cause what you are observing.. Verify your cables are good. The output of the pedal goes in the FRONT jacks of the amp. ONLY line level drives go to the back jacks.
0helpful
1answer

Good day..The common problem in a closed pa system setup is feedback.It limits the capacity of unit to give a higher intensity of volume..With this I just want to ask if DBX Driverack pa+ will work well...

The DBX driveracks work well with about any PA. The only PAs you might encounter a problem with would be one of the newer line array and digital processing PAs. Let your audio person get creative, the presets for multiple PAs are just a guide. If your sound person is confident and is qualified, let him/her experiment and/or rehearse - you'll be amazed at what that system is capable of.
1helpful
1answer

My 1215 equalizer produces a hum when inserted between the subwoofer output of the receiver and subwoofer amp. I am using the barrier strip inputs and outputs, rca tip to plus, shield to minus. I have...

Wild guess - I had something just like your problem (including consumer dbx components) and it was ONLY with the track lighting turned ON. Replacing the lighting control DID NOT help but the problem up and went away by itself.

Sometimes hum can be defeated by rotating the orientation of a single power plug.

Just wondering: WHY do you feel the need to EQ the sub beyond its own controls? Though I don't have not pro-gear, I'd use a dbx-120 instead and save the EQ for something more in tune (pardon the pun) with its capabilities.
2helpful
2answers

Amp turns on but no sound even with diff guitars and cords

Hi Dan
I wish I could just say what to fix, but you can not do this at home. Line 6 is a great amp and worth the time taking it down to the music shop , to be looked at an give you a repair estimate. good luck keep on rocking in the free world. DFD
0helpful
1answer

Bose 901 Active EQ Loop

There's good news and bad news. The bad news is that a multichannel receiver with Bose 901's will only sound right in STEREO on stereo analog material. For one thing, the other speakers around the room are not designed to recieve its Active Equalization and for another, if you engage your Tape Monitor you will not be able to play digital sources. Tape Monitor is for analog stereo material only and on my receiver it disables any digital inputs.

The good news. I have a setup similar to what I think you're trying to do and it works great!

A separate stereo amp for the 901's was my solution. I run a Carver AV-406 (5-channel amp) for my 901's in Front, 2 Subwoofers and the Rear Surround channel, with the Active EQ between the receiver Front L&R Outputs and the 901's amp channels. My receiver controls everything and just drives the Center and Surround speakers. You could get by with just a stereo amp for the 901's. A Carver M-200 is a good efficient amplifier that would have you cooking just fine (2x100W).

Run the dbx and BSR in tandem with each through the tape monitor loop on the receiver but be advised you can only use them on analog source stero material. However, you can still employ the various DSP options to spread the sound around the room.

At my PC workstation across the room I have a stack of analog processors and sources including dbx 3bx-ds, dbx 120x-ds, BSR Spatial Enhancer, BBE 462 Sonic Maximizer, SS-525x EQ, Carver C-9, dbx-224x, JVC cassette deck, Dual 1249 Turntable running through a Garrard MRM-101 Preamp, Pioneer PDR-509 CD Recorder and the Media Center PC stereo analog channels all running through a dbx 400x Program Route Selector (a godsend) which is attached to my ONE TAPE MONITOR on my Pioneer VSX-36TX Receiver. Of course, I have some of my analog processors running in tandem, too, since the 224x only has three processor and three tape loops.

For listening/recording anything 2-channel analog I engage the stack through the Tape Monitor. For everything else I turn the Tape Monitor off. The nice thing about the stack being separate is that I can doodle with recording and use headphones while the TV/DVD/Blu-Ray do something else.
1helpful
1answer

Having a hard time connecting various audio components

Yes, it is a little tricky...

1) CD Changer (output) -> CD input on Amp

this is tricky... this will allow you to record to your tape deck, and control the sound via the EQ:
2) Tape Deck (tape out / recout) -> TAPE PLAYBACK on EQ
3) Tape RecOut on EQ -> Tape 1 Playback on Amp
4) Amp Tape 1 RecOut -> Tape Deck Playback / Input / RecIn
in essence, your creating a loop starting from the tape deck, going to the eq, then to the amp, then back to the tape deck to record.

Your EQ has another set of LINE IN and LINE OUT - use the second Tape 2 on the amp to create another loop. This will
allow you to control the EQ for any of the other sources.
5) LINE IN on EQ -> Tape 2 RecOut
6) Tape 2 Playback on Amp -> LINE OUT on EQ

5) Radio Tuner (output) -> Tuner input on Amp
6) DVD/VCR Combo Output -> AV/AUX on Amp

7) PC Computer... you don't have room for this. You can either use the PHONO input, and you'll have to purchase a Line Level Phono Converter
or, get a Y cable and split the signal and share with some other source.

Hope this helps.

- OPTiC
www.djproaudio.com
www.repairny.com
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