Trigger Shifter Set
Trigger Shifter Set

The Importance Of Quality Equipment When Recording Your Music
Effects pedals are electronic devices which can dramatically change the audio output produced by musical instruments. While there are effect pedals which can cause slight alterations in sound, there are others that may change the sound drastically. Effects pedals are usually used during live concerts and while recording in studios, using the electric guitar, bass guitar, and the keyboards. Incidentally, to improve the quality of musical instruments when recording music, effects can be used on instruments other than the guitar like the drums, vocals, and acoustic instruments.
There are some commonly employed effects like fuzz boxes, reverb units, and the wah-wah pedals. The guitar has been using effects pedals ever since the sixties when rock and roll music reigned. At this time, Mayer created the first pedals that were used later by rock legends like Jimi Hendrix.
Modern day guitarists use many such effects pedals when recording music or performing live. These effects pedals help add more colors to the guitar tone which can also be done with the help of an amplifier. An amplifier is not capable of producing as many effects and its settings must be altered as you change songs. Similar to the amplifier and the electric guitar which allows the guitarist to play better; the effects pedals offer a wide range of expressions.
Ever since effects pedals were introduced, others like the rack mounted effects have come into play too. These are more sophisticated and have to be triggered by the pedals themselves. With the help of these innovations, the modern day guitarist can stomp to start the effects.
The typical effects pedals are of the following types:
* Distortion where you can make the popular heavy metal sound by using an overdrive which distorts their tone. This distortion actually works when many overtones are added to the notes being played.
* The wah-wah pedals are used by applying pressure with your foot. The volume pedal allows the guitarist to change the volume of his guitar from silent to full and can produce a violin-like sound.
* The compressor pedal makes loud notes soft and vice versa.
* The chorus pedal helps to produce a “spacious” sound which occurs with delays, sounding vastly different from original notes.
* Flangers produce twin sounds from one single note but the second one happens after a slight delay.
* The phasers use the original notes but give it an “other world” effect by making the distortion mind-boggling.
* Delay effects pedals give an echo effect by delaying the sound by nearly a couple of seconds.
* The octave pedals of pitch shifters help to produce sound nearly three octaves above the original notes.
* The tremolo emits an effect of the guitar volume being moved up and down dramatically.
* The vibrato gives dynamic effects and changes the pitch drastically.
When you record music, it is very important to make sure the musical instruments you are using are of superior quality; else your music suffers. To enhance the quality output of musical instruments, Sounds Great Music has devised various kinds of effects pedals you can choose from. These pedals are a form of music equipment that can make your music sound better and different.
About the Author
Sounds Great Music is a UK based music and instrument specialist. For years they have supplied quality professional grade music equipment and instruments to industry professionals. For guitars, effects pedals and all guitar equipment, look no further than Sounds Great Music.
splurge on new bicycle shifters and derailleur or keep it simple and upgrade later.?
I have a mountain bike, currently equipped with mechanical disk brakes and Avilio pods (trigger shifters and brake lever in one) and Avilio derailleur. I am switching to hydraulic brakes and need to ditch the pods; I also would like to switch to Sram parts but am on a tight budget. Should I
a) Cut up and rig up the current pods without the brake lever and keep the sifters working (not even sure if i can do this)
b) Get a cheap set of used Avilio shifters to use till i save up money for the new stuff.
c) Just suck it up and get some X.9 shifters and derailleur.
Not expecting too many answers to this one.
well it depends on the bike… if its an old bike, then just upgrade later.. if its a relitively new bike, then it might make sense to upgrade now.
it also depends on the quality of the brakes. there are many mechanic brakes that are very comparable to the quality of hydraulic disc… the avid ballbearing brakes for one. they are a very good brake, and for the cost of them, you cant purchase a hydrulic brake with as good of quality….
this is very similar to way back in the day, when magura introduced the hydraulic rim brakes… you spend $300 on a set of brakes just to find out that they are too much to deal with, and they dont work much better then standard cable brakes.
that decision is up to you.
if it was me, id wait to upgrade later…
my current custom bike needs a new cassette and chain rings, but the bike is 5+ years old, and im ready for something else, so im going to just retire it, buy a new bike and in a few years after i graduate college, turn it into the lightest bike i can.
SRAM X9 Mountain Bike Trigger Shifter Set (9-Speed)
