Jack Flush
Jack Flush
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![]() 8 Pin Flush Mount Wall Jack 279 409 White US $.99
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![]() Jack Guitar Chrome Cylinder Flush Mount Output Jack US $1.89
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![]() 3 Cylinder Output Jack Flush Mount 1 4 Sliver Tone high quality guitar p US $11.88
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![]() 12 PORT KEYSTONE JACK WALL 2 GANG FLUSH ONE PIECE PLATE US $6.99
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![]() Dual Flush Mount wall jacks Broadbrand products 24 units US $45.00
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![]() 4 Hole Port Keystone Jack Flush Wall Face Plate White US $2.35
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![]() Cylinder Stereo Jack Flush mount For Ibanez guitar CR US $.01
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![]() NEW PHONE WALL JACK FLUSH MOUNTED MODULAR US $5.99
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![]() 3 Sylinder stereo Jack Output For Ibanez guit Sliver US $.99
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![]() 25 USB Protective Cover Cap Type A Jacks Flush Face US $10.20
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![]() 50 USB Protective Cover Cap Type A Jacks Flush Face US $14.45
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![]() FLUSH MOUNT AUX 35MM AUDIO HEADPHONE JACK EXTENSION US $3.95
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![]() Keystone Jack 35mm Stereo Flush Type White US $1.37
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![]() 4 USB Protective Cap Cover for Type A Jacks Flush Face US $4.75
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![]() 10 USB Protective Cover Cap Type A Jacks Flush Face US $6.38
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![]() SEJ 3 Guitar Bass End Pin Output Jack Flush Mount Threaded Mono or Stereo Chrome US $6.95
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![]() ProLine Flush Mount Jack US $7.95
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![]() FLUSH MOUNT AUX 35MM 1 8 STEREO HEADPHONE JACK DOCK US $4.95
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How can you find the probability of getting a royal flush in a 5 card-hand?
royal flush consist of an ace king queen jack and ten of the same suit. how would i start im a little confused...
look up permutations and combinations
5/52 X 4/51 X 3/50 X 2/49 X 1/48 = 1/2,598,960
Actually these are the odds of achieving a royal flush in a said suit...
The odds of achieving a royal flush in any suit are slightly different...
20/52 X 4/51 X 3/50 X 2/49 X 1/48 = 1/649,740
Gold Telecaster
Gold Telecaster
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![]() Tele Telecaster PickguardGold Mirror Fits Fender US $13.20
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![]() GOLD FENDER Telecaster NECK PICKUP COVER Tele Metal NEW US $12.97
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![]() PICKUP SCREWS Rubber for Fender Telecaster Bridge GOLD US $4.75
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![]() GOLD Telecaster Humbucker BRIDGE for Fender Guitar BT4 US $21.99
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![]() Guitar Parts WILKINSON Bridge Telecaster Brass Saddle GOLD US $26.99
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![]() Guitar Parts TELECASTER BRIDGE Top Bottom Load GOLD US $17.99
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Guitar experts needed: Which guitar should I get?
What is a good intermidiate guitar that is not a strat or telecaster? Anyone have any suggestions? I tend to like SG's but would not mind an Ibanez, Les Paul, Washburn, or something like that. I've got a price range of $300- 400. I already have an Epiphone g-310 SG with gold hardware and Gibson '57 humbucker in the bridge, but am looking for a backup axe in case something happens to it. Any suggestions?
If you already have an SG you need a Fender strat, maple fingerboard, with good colors (not just black with white pickguard), although with that price range you're looking at a pretty low quality spectrum. I'd go Ebay, used, try and find an 800 piece selling for cheap. Definitely don't get another SG. I have an SG and love it, but when you buy another instrument, go for variety. The SG and the Strat are arguably the two best guitars ever made. You have one, get the other. Ibanez and Washburn piss me off. They sound canned to me. Les Pauls have a great sound, but are weirdly heavy in the body which lifts the neck up on you and you end up playing all jazzy or bluesy. So I don't like les Pauls. SGs and Strats are thin and well balanced. You can lunge and hop around and wail on stage, lift them up and slide the strings along the edge of the cymbals, they're just the ultimate stage rockers.
Urei Mixer
Urei Mixer
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![]() PKG4017x17 SILVER Aluminum Knob for Urei Mixer Effects US $19.99
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![]() 40017X17 ALLOY KNOB for Urei Mixer 1620 Effects Pedals US $178.00
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![]() 40 17X17 ALLOY KNOB for Urei Mixer 1620 Effects Pedals US $19.99
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![]() 40017x17 SILVER Aluminum Knob for Urei Mixer Effects US $178.00
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![]() 4019x17 SILVER Aluminum Knob for Urei Mixer 1620 US $34.99
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![]() UREI 1620 MUSIC MIXER MANUAL 28 pgs US $9.99
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![]() PKG1017x17 SILVER Aluminum Knob for Urei Mixer Effe US $9.50
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![]() PKG40017x17 SILVER Aluminum Knob for Urei Mixer Effe US $165.00
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![]() PKG8017x17 SILVER Aluminum Knob for Urei Mixer Effects US $49.98
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What is the best out of the following for turntables?
Stanton
Numark
or vestax?
and for mixers:
UREI DJ MIXERS
ECLER DJ MIXERS
STANTON DJ MIXERS
TECHNICS DJ MIXERS
BEHRINGER DJ MIXERS
NUMARK DJ MIXERS
what would you reccomend?
Vestax decks and Numark mixers
Jack Fits
Jack Fits
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![]() New Gateway DC Jack Board W323 UI1 M210 M250 3000 Fits 16mm Adapter 00885 US $6.90
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![]() 2010 honda fit sport jack US $55.00
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![]() Qty 2 Blank Dual Speakon Jack Plate Fits Neutrik US Shipper US $10.99
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Muscle Building and Fitness Trumps Simple Weight Loss
Whether you are a man or a woman, it's important to your general health and well being that you focus upon muscle building and fitness. Many people that I speak with indicate that they would really like to build muscle and improve their fitness, but are fearful of lifting weights because they don't want to bulk up and look like bodybuilders. They assume that this added muscle will cause them to weigh more. This is not the case.
In order to be fit and remain fit, you must build muscle fitness. The erroneous thinking that you will bulk up like a professional bodybuilder is ludicrous, and shows a profound ignorance as to just how much dedication and effort go into achieving that bodybuilder's look. Those muscles don't appear after a few bench presses. It takes years and focus to build the muscle groups that define the bodybuilder.
One myth about bodybuilding and fitness that would be humorous is it weren't so ludicrous, is that muscle weighs more that fat. Obviously, a pound is a pound whether it's fat or muscle. The difference between the two is that one pound of muscle takes up significantly less volume that a pound of fat. Muscle is more dense. If you have ten pounds of new muscle on your body, you'll have less of an increase in body size than you would with ten pounds of new fat. Fat takes more space.
Some people, who have been trying to build muscle fitness and thin up their bodies, have actually stopped exercising when they found that there was a weight gain associated with their exercising, because of the increased muscle mass. They saw the gain in weight as a problem that had to be lost. They did not understand that their exercising had removed much of their unhealthy body fat and replaced it with beneficial muscle, and had also left them more thin and trim than they had been before. Don't rush into cardio exercises to burn off the added weight from weight training, it's good weight without extra body fat.
It's crucial that you focus upon body building and fitness rather than on simple weight loss. If you focus only upon losing weight, simply stop eating. You'll lose weight, but you'll also lose muscle mass. You'll become a very thin, weak, unhealthy person, who may look good for a while, but will not be physically fit. You'd be far better off to practice weight training to replace the weight of your excess body fat with an equivalent weight of muscle. You'll maintain your desired weight, gain muscle mass, and be a physically fit specimen, which is what is important.
If you have carefully read the above, and understand the mechanism by which body fat is replaced by muscle, you can readily see why so many dieters, who are seeking only weight loss, end up being disappointed. They seldom lose the weight that is bothering them, and when they do lose weight it is often not from the areas of their bodies that they had wished it to be.
If you wish to be a healthy person with a fit body, it's important that you build muscle fitness. Weighing less is only part of the battle, weighing the same with muscle instead of fat should be the goal. You'll still get what you want, muscle building and fitness, and a thinner body. I will be a healthier and fit body with the body reshaped by muscle in a manner that could never be achieved by simple weight loss.
How many jack dempseys and convicts can fit in my tank?
I have a 55 gallon tank with one 3.5 inch JD. How many more JDs and/or convicts can i add?
Jack Dempsies grow to be 6-10 inches and require 55 gallons each. You are at your limit here. You would need a much larger tank for more Jack Dempsies.
Output Jack
Output Jack
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![]() 2Wire In Line DSL Filter Splitter Giveback Jack 1 Line 2 Outputs US $.97
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![]() 2011 Fender Stratocaster Strat OUTPUT JACK Guitar NR US $.99
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![]() Chrome Electric Guitar plated Output Plate Jack Socket US $.99
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![]() Chrome Oval Jack Output Plate Jackplate for Electric US $.97
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![]() Chrome Oval Jack Output Plate US $.89
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![]() 1 Chrome Square Jack Output Plate Electric Jackplate US $.89
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![]() Golden Output Jack Socket Plate for Electric Guitar US $.99
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![]() Black Boat Output Jack Plate Socket for Stratocaster US $.99
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![]() Guitar Flat Output Jack Plate Socket Chrome US $1.06
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Using a Mixer Insert Jack as a Direct Out
When connecting a mixer to a digital audio interface or multi-track recorder, you normally connect the Direct Out jack of each mixer channel to a track's input on the interface. For example, let's say your kick drum mic is connected to channel 1 of the mixer. If you wanted to record the kick drum to track 1, you would connect the channel 1 Direct Out to the track 1 input of the interface. You would then connect the channel 2 Direct Out to the track 2 input of the interface, etc. Using the Direct Outs in such a way takes each channel's signal post-fader and post-EQ and sends it straight to the recording device. This allows you to record that one instrument (and only that instrument) to its corresponding track on the recorder or in your DAW software.
But what if your mixer doesn't come equipped with Direct Outs? Many lower-priced mixers, or mixers designed more for stage use, do not. It's also common on many 16-channel mixers to only have Direct Outs on the first 8 channels. If your mixer doesn't have Direct Outs (or doesn't have enough of them), you could always use the Main L/R Outputs of the mixer, but there are only two of them. But the problem with this is that ALL of the channels in use will get mixed together and sent to those outputs, which is generally not what you want. If your mixer has Subgroup outs (or "buses"), you could use those, but on a 4-bus mixer, there are only, well–4 of them. So what's a guy to do if he wants to record each mixer channel to its own track? Fortunately, there's another alternative–the Insert Jack.
An Insert Jack is a TRS (Tip-Ring-Sleeve or 1/4? stereo) jack that is typically used to connect a signal processor to only affect a single mixer channel. An example would be a compressor or noise gate that might be connected through the Insert Jack of a mixer channel to only affect a single vocal mic. To use the Insert Jack in such a way, you need a "Y" cable with a stereo TRS plug on one end (connected to the Insert Jack) and two mono TS (Tip-Sleeve or 1/4? mono) plugs on the other end. One of the TS plugs is connected to the input on the signal processor and the other is connected to the output of the same device. So essentially, the Insert Jack creates a signal "loop" that both sends the signal for the channel out to an external signal processor and then returns it back to the mixer, all through a single jack (the Insert Jack). However, if you're not using an Insert Jack for its intended purpose (and you often will not), it has a handy second function–as a Direct Out.
There are a few different ways of using an Insert Jack as a Direct Out. First, you can use a standard TS to TS patch cable. Plug the cable all the way in to the Insert Jack. The only drawback here is that the signal is sent to the recorder from the Insert jack, but the signal is "interrupted" and is no longer sent to the mixer's main outputs. This may be okay for some recording situations, but in other cases, you will want the signal passed on through to the main outputs as normal, for monitoring purposes or for connection to a power amp and speakers in the case of a live concert.
The next option using a regular TS to TS cable is to only plug the cable in to the "first click" of the Insert Jack. This will tap the signal and send it straight out to the recorder, while still allowing it to pass on through to the mixer's main outputs. The only drawback to this is that if you don't get the cable plugged in just right (to only the first click), you may end up with either no signal to your recorder or no signal to the main outputs (or both).
So a better alternative than the "first click" or the "all-the-way-in" method is to use a special cable or adapter that both passes the signal for the channel to the send of the Insert Jack but still passes it on through to the mixer's outputs as normal. To do this, you can use a Stereo Plug to Mono Jack adapter with a normal mono TS to TS cable. Or you could buy a special Insert Direct Out cable adapter.
However, if you're like me, you like to keep your connections and cable runs as simple and clean as possible, in which case you don't like using adapters or plugging cables into cables. So the most elegant alternative is to use a specialized Insert Jack/Direct Out cable for just this purpose. Assuming that you have some very basic soldering skills, this cable is very easy to make, which I will now describe.
Start with a regular mono patch cable with TS plugs on both ends. Remove one of the plugs from the end with some wire cutters or tin snips. Now, solder a stereo TRS plug onto that end of the cable, shorting the Tip and Ring together, and connecting the shield to the Sleeve as normal. This will effectively send the signal to the output of the Insert Jack, while simultaneously returning it to the mixer, which will pass the signal on through to the Main outputs.
Some audio snobs might scoff at such a technique, saying that an Insert Jack wasn't designed to be used this way, and therefore it shouldn't be. However, some audio purists argue that for recording purposes, this method might actually be superior to using a Direct Out, because the signal path should be the shortest, cleanest, and most uncolored. The reason is that the signal is being sent directly from the preamp to the recorder, without going anywhere else. It's not passing through the EQ or even the fader, which could, in theory, color or degrade the signal.
Now, of course, like anything else, there are some pros and cons to using this technique. We've already covered the pros, so now for the cons. First, when using this technique, the only control that you have over the level of the signal being sent to the recorder is the Trim or Gain knob on your mixer. Because the Insert Jack is pre-fader, the fader becomes useless in terms of the signal being sent to the recorder. However, the fader will still control the level of the channel in the main mix. Second, when using this technique, you are bypassing the EQ, so if you like to use some EQ for preliminary shaping of the recorded track, you're out of luck. But in most cases, I don't use any EQ when tracking. I use the parametric EQ built into my DAW software for shaping the sound of my tracks after recording, so this isn't really a concern for me. Finally, if you're using the Insert Jack as a Direct Out, you can no longer use it as an Insert. So if you wanted to patch a Compressor into the channel to tame some peaks, you'd have to connect it another way (i.e.: Insert to Compressor to Recorder).
In conclusion, if you need to do some multitrack recording, but don't have a mixer that's equipped with Direct Outs (or enough of them), the Insert Jack makes a handy replacement. Or if you're an audio purist who wants the cleanest and shortest possible signal path between your mic and recorder, the Insert Jack may be the way to go.
How do you connect wire to output jack (Fender Guitar)?
The wire connecting to the output jack on my Fender electric guitar broke off and is a little frayed at the end. Is there any way to fix this??
Hello! Just strip away ¼ to ½ inch of insulation to expose new wiring, and re-solder the wire to the correct terminal. Depending upon your particular model of guitar, you may need to unscrew the jack from the body to gain access with a soldering iron. There is generally enough slack in the wiring to permit a reconnection; if not, you can solder a short piece of wire onto the existing wire to bridge the gap. Make sure to insulate the exposed splice with either electrical tape or shrink tubing. Easy fix! Best regards, Dana


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