Your cart is empty.
Your cart is empty.6.35mm Acoustic Electric Guitar Bass Mono Endpin Output Jack Strap Button Jack Socket Chrome
Óscar Velázquez Rosas
Reviewed in Mexico on July 17, 2024
Fácil de instalar .
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on July 16, 2024
The look is good, it solidly mounts by drilling an appropriate sized hole where the Strap Holder was located, does not modify the sound acoustically when not plugged in, has a very solid mount with the 3 screws provided.
LP
Reviewed in the United States on June 27, 2024
Won't make correct contact when plugged in fully. Avoid purchase
user
Reviewed in the United States on March 25, 2024
The flange design for mounting made wiring this jack up a breeze. I pulled the wires through the hole for the jack, made my connections, and simply pushed the jack into the hole and sunk the screws without having to make adjustments to a set nut like used on most jacks. No interference in the sound quality as my guitar cable fits snuggly into the jack
audrey cooper
Reviewed in the United States on February 26, 2024
It is solid and won’t deteriorate in time. I use it on all my builds. Price is right and looks great.
Terry
Reviewed in the United States on December 23, 2024
Good quality
bruno morelli
Reviewed in Italy on November 22, 2024
FA IL SUO DOVERE
MDJDCarter
Reviewed in the United States on November 12, 2024
I used this to connect my lapsteel guitar. It was a good fit. Works great.
Customer
Reviewed in Canada on January 17, 2024
If you have a preamp and a battery in your acoustic guitar this endpin jack will not work. You need a 3-prong TRS jack to accommodate the battery switch circuit. Too bad, as the sturdy design of this jack with the external screw fasteners is compelling.
will
Reviewed in the United States on April 4, 2024
The longer lug is the negative.
Steven Boots
Reviewed in the United States on October 18, 2023
Short version: if you're in the market for one of these, buy it. Looks good, feels solid and works fine. If it doesn't work, try reversing the leads.Long version: If you're in the market for one of these, you're working on an electroacoustic guitar. You may (or may not) know that the wiring is different than a regular electric guitar. A regular electric has one cable coming out that carries ground, and the (mono) signal wire.Your EA guitar, if you have a battery-powered preamp, has a cable coming out that has the terms ground, signal and battery on it. You may try to find some info on the interwebs on how to connect, but I didn't find any. You may try to copy the wiring in one of your other EA guitars, which won't work. Here's why: Those 3 terms are going to be the same on any EA guitar, however, the wire colors coming out of the preamp are not uniform. So, I copied my existing guitar, fired it up, and it didn't work. I thought "Oh, damn, this preamp is dead". But, after a little fooling around with a voltmeter, I realized what was happening. Reversed the polarity on the leads and all works fine.To summarize: All EA guitar manufacturers are going to feed ground, mono signal and battery to the output jack. But you don't know what color wire is supposed to feed each terminal on the jack. They will all feed ground to ground, mono signal to tip, and battery to ring. Ground to ground is obvious, and the other two wires...well, you have a 50/50 chance of getting it right. Like I said, if it doesn't work, just reverse the two colored wires. Hopefully this will save someone from buying a new preamp they don't actually need:) Now... go forth and solder something!!!:)
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