pjmuck wrote:
...as long as they're going to be stubborn in their desire to maintain their design aesthetics
People have been saying that about the bridge pickup cover (or the entire assembly, for that matter) and the mutes for years!
pjmuck wrote:
Apparently I'm not the only one who gets confused by how exactly the Rick O Sound is supposed to operate, so please do tell!
Yeah, this comes up quite a bit. Here's how it works (I'm sure you already know some of this):
If you look at the end of a guitar cable, you will see it has two parts: the tip, and the shaft, and these are separated by a
plastic ring:
http://s3.showmecables.com/images/catal ... Jack-1.jpgThis is a mono cable, also called "TS" (T for Tip, S for Shaft). Mono meaning one signal. If a bass has multiple pickups, they are combined into one signal, which goes out the tip and returns through the shaft.
Now, if you look at the cable on a pair of headphones, you will see an extra middle section, called the "ring":
http://manual.audacityteam.org/m/images ... eo_1_4.jpgThis is a stereo cable, called "TRS". It has two signals: left ear (tip), right ear (middle) and return (shaft).
The Rick-o-Sound uses a stereo cable. The signal for the bridge pickup goes out through the tip, and the neck pickup through the middle. The signals do not get combined, so they can be amped or effected seperately.
The next piece is connecting it to an amp. You can get a cable like this:
http://c1.zzounds.com/media/quality,85/ ... 8f48aa.gifThe stereo end goes into the Rick-o-Sound jack. The mono ends then connect to an amp or pedal board or whatever.
Or you can get a stereo cable and then get an adapter to split the stereo cable into two mono cables, like this:
http://s3.showmecables.com/images/catal ... able-1.jpgThis is what the "Rick-o-Sound" box does, which is really nothing more than a collector's item at this point because the cable adapter is cheap.
You should not have a cable connected to both jacks at the same time. Also, if you try to use a mono cable for the Rick-o-Sound jack, you won't get any signal from the neck pickup.
Let me know if any of this doesn't make sense, or if anyone has any other questions!
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Gilmourisgod wrote:
I never really "got" what a Rick is capable of until I ran it stereo a few times in my college band. We used to call it the "Piano of Doom". You get all the bottom and all the top in total a**kicking mode.