Dragster
Well-Known Member
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- #1
I have a small project that I'm working on, and what I'm trying to do is hook up a small mic into a guitar effect pedal (that is powered by a 9V battery), and output that to a small 2" speaker in order to create a voice modulator to put in a helmet. I really know nothing about this type of electrical project, which is why I'm here looking for any help I can get, so please excuse my EXTREME ignorance. I have no idea if this will actually even work, but I'd like to give it a try. Honestly, the quality doesn't even need to be great, as long as one can understand what I'm saying. Please see the pictures to get an understanding of what I'm trying to do.
I am assuming (yes, I know the old adage) that the mic should input correctly since it is a 1/4" jack. If not, I have a separate mic that has very small red and white wires (Positive and negative? Signal and ground? I don't even know. Ugh...) that I could connect a different way, if I knew how. As I said earlier, the guitar pedal is powered by a 9V battery. I am not sure if the speaker is passive or not. I will be disconnecting it from the board that it is currently on, unless I need that board to power it. I'm assuming that the board it is on is some sort of amplifier. So maybe it isn't a passive speaker. Either way, if I need to retain that amp board, it is also powered by a 9V battery. But I need a way to connect either 1)the speaker to the output of the guitar pedal, or 2)the guitar pedal to the input of the other board, which is red and white wires. I cut into a guitar effects cable that I had to see what the internal wires looked like, and I posted that. I wasn't sure if the white would match anything, and the rest was loose fibers.
Thanks in advance for any help, and again, I apologize for my extreme ignorance of the subject!
I am assuming (yes, I know the old adage) that the mic should input correctly since it is a 1/4" jack. If not, I have a separate mic that has very small red and white wires (Positive and negative? Signal and ground? I don't even know. Ugh...) that I could connect a different way, if I knew how. As I said earlier, the guitar pedal is powered by a 9V battery. I am not sure if the speaker is passive or not. I will be disconnecting it from the board that it is currently on, unless I need that board to power it. I'm assuming that the board it is on is some sort of amplifier. So maybe it isn't a passive speaker. Either way, if I need to retain that amp board, it is also powered by a 9V battery. But I need a way to connect either 1)the speaker to the output of the guitar pedal, or 2)the guitar pedal to the input of the other board, which is red and white wires. I cut into a guitar effects cable that I had to see what the internal wires looked like, and I posted that. I wasn't sure if the white would match anything, and the rest was loose fibers.
Thanks in advance for any help, and again, I apologize for my extreme ignorance of the subject!
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