Don't know how many of you may be familiar with the piezo pickups used in old Airline/Supro pocket bass guitars, but let me fill you in: they suck. Sorry if I'm being blasphemous but if there is something about them that is somehow appreciated, well, I don't appreciate it. Apparently, it's just some kind of piezo pickup stuck inside the rosewood bridge assembly, and there is no boost or buffer or anything like that. So, you can alternate between this fantastic, big, round single coil neck pickup, or (drum roll please) the sound of an unplugged guitar coming through a tin can. That's how it sounds to me. Hardly any output at all.
What I would like to know is if there is some kind of ready-made booster or buffer or something like that which will run off a 9 volt battery that I can wire into the thing so that the piezo pickup can actually get in the neighborhood of the neck pickup output. I don't want some elaborate preamp, or something with add-on knobs, or equalizing etc. I just want something that I can stick inside the guitar that will boost the piezo signal to a "normal" level. These have about a zillion holes drilled in the back with a plastic cover, so there is plenty of room in there to stick something along with a battery inside that doesn't involve drilling holes for knobs in the guitar.
Any ideas? David Schwab, as resident bass guru, lord of all things sub-82 hz and generally knowledgeable guy, I'm looking at you.....
What I would like to know is if there is some kind of ready-made booster or buffer or something like that which will run off a 9 volt battery that I can wire into the thing so that the piezo pickup can actually get in the neighborhood of the neck pickup output. I don't want some elaborate preamp, or something with add-on knobs, or equalizing etc. I just want something that I can stick inside the guitar that will boost the piezo signal to a "normal" level. These have about a zillion holes drilled in the back with a plastic cover, so there is plenty of room in there to stick something along with a battery inside that doesn't involve drilling holes for knobs in the guitar.
Any ideas? David Schwab, as resident bass guru, lord of all things sub-82 hz and generally knowledgeable guy, I'm looking at you.....
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