Or you can get a power inverter ($60 -$80) and a motorcycle battery ($12)and use any amp you want. A power inverter converts 12 volts DC to 110 volts AC'

Gary


On 2014-08-07 13:47, Tobiah wrote:
I have this guy:

http://www.crateamps.com/products/pindex.php?prodID=25

It has one of those brick-sized lead-acid batteries
so it has plenty of amps to burn.  There is a 'clean'
input with a 4-channel eq section.  I tried two
other battery powered solutions before this one and
sent them back.  They couldn't handle the bass at
high volume.  I stuck with this one.

My model must actually be different than the one
I linked to, because mine has an effects loop where
this one has the CD input.




On 08/07/2014 10:05 AM, Nancy Carlin wrote:
I think Wayne is reight that the Mouse amps are no longer available.
I had one for a long time and it worked well, although there were not
many ways to adjust the sound, like there are now in newer amps.  The
Mouse had a battery and it could also be plugged in, so it was quite
versatile.  Now I have a Mackie SRM150, which is about the size of a
car battery and it has 2 inputs, which can be useful.  It's just the
thing when you only need to be a little bit louder and the listeners
will be put off by seeing lots of cords and wires. If you need a bit
louder amplification you can send a line out to a another powered
speaker. Nancy



So I have the Hog 30, which is very clean with good bass, though
nowhere near as loud as a cranked 30 watt tube amp.  I have a
Sennheiser 441 mic (which is kind of expensive these days) on a
nice boom stand which can be adjusted to be about 2.5 feet high,
with a cable and a low to high impedance line transformer (by Shure
or Hosa). I set the mic up on its stand in front of me and put the
Pignose off to the side.  My wife uses a Mini-Mouse which is a very
nice amp, but with its smaller speaker the bass isn't as good, and
I think it is not made anymore.

There is a picture with me playing the g**tar at

http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/me/opening5.jpg


Wayne


Begin forwarded message:

From
It is over a foot tall, so not as portable as the little one,
but has big rechargeable batteries that last a long time, and
if what goes in sounds like a lute, what comes out sounds like
a lute.
This is of interest to me, since I sometimes need amplification
for outdoor gigs.  From your reference to Sennheiser, I take it
you use a microphone for the lute, rather than having some sort
of pickup installed.  Could you say more about how this works?  A
picture might help.

Geoff



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