Neewer Piezo Contact Microphone Pickup for Guitar Violin Banjo OUD Ukulele Mandolin and More
Descriptions:
Professional Piezo Contact Microphone pickup – 1/4″ jack with 10 inch cable.
Includes fastening tapes but not putty attachment options.
Plug to your amp, bass amp or other recording equipment.
Can be mounted any acoustic instrument including Guitars, violins, Mandolin, Nanjo, Ukulele, dulcimer, pianos, horns, harmonicas to pick up voice
Has the advantage of being able to eliminate interfering external sounds and not be influenced by sound reflections from nearby objects.
Package Content:
1x Piezo Contact Microphone Pickup
Product Features
- Professional Piezo Contact Microphone pickup – 1/4″ jack with 10 inch cable
- Includes fastening tapes but not putty attachment options
- Plug to your amp, bass amp or other recording equipment
- Can be mounted any acoustic instrument including Guitars, violins, Mandolin, Nanjo, Ukulele, dulcimer, pianos, horns, harmonicas to pick up voice
- Has the advantage of being able to eliminate interfering external sounds and not be influenced by sound reflections from nearby objects
Great pickup, you need to understand how it works This piezo pickup is great! You have to understand how they work in order to get the best sound. I used some masking tape to find the best spot for the pickup. For my mandolin, it was right behind the bridge, in set in the middle of the strings. YOU HAVE TO SECURE THE WIRE! The wire is microphonic as well and will make tons of noise when moved or touched. Simply secure it down with scotch tape. I stretched mine tight, wrap the wire to the back of the mandolin and taped it down in a few spots I…
you will enjoy this a lot and likely have no complaints Here’s the deal with these: Yes, they do work surprisingly well for pickups costing less than a box of tissues, and if you need one for playing around at home with a knock-around instrument, you will enjoy this a lot and likely have no complaints. HOWEVER: If you are using these in a crazy environment (constant gigs) and have a nice instrument (and definitely NOT sticking that velcro to your instrument finish!), these are not a good choice. Because I wasn’t going to stick the velcro on, we used…