Given what I know about physics and shaping a signal, it seems unrealistic\
I have no clue but the idea intrigues me. It seems unrealistic and maybe it makes some sort of noise that they just used the familiar terms for instead of calling the noise what it really is
I found this, now im even more interested
And, the more I think about it, the more I think I should learn to edit video and make my own YouTube channel.
I play better than almost everyone I've seen making their own YouTube videos - and the few that are as good as I am are so close that I think I'd give 'em a run for their money.
I was pondering this last night, before going to sleep.
They could be using springs and resonating chambers. The springs have sympathetic vibrations like your strings have sympathetic vibrations.
Though he refers to it as digital. Which, frankly, kinda makes sense. I mean, those are variable knobs - pots if you will - that have to be hooked to something and I'm willing to bet a dollar that they're not connected mechanically to anything.
I was thinking they might have a speaker of sorts inside the guitar body.
Also, I meant to send this hours ago (I did not go for a drive today):
I've seen a lot of guitars in my time. Many of 'em can be justified for existing.
Now, who wants a semi-hollow body Gibson ES-335 clone - with seven strings?
I can't think of a single (real world) use for owning that guitar - unless it's to make your own music on, or to modify covers. 'Cause a 7 string guitar is almost exclusively metal - which this guitar is decidedly not.
On the other hand, it's $250.
Firefly is another of those 'good' cheap guitars.
Stray Cats metal?
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