Did I blow out my guitar amp with my digital piano?

G

Guest

Guest
I found it would be safe to plug the headphone out of my digital piano (Yamaha P-95) into my guitar amp's input. When i did this though, there was a loud popping sound and the piano's sound couldn't be heard, just buzzing. Now when I use the amp with my guitar, I hear some static and sound glitches. Was the piano's signal to strong so it broke the amp? And could the amp have damaged the digital piano?
 

aldan

Distinguished
Apr 15, 2013
320
0
19,010
the piano should work fine with the amp,but it sounds like you had the equipment turned on when you plugged it in and that may not be good.in the old days of tube amps ive seen speakers popped like this.granted the volume has to be turned up fairly high but damage can be done.at the very least the volume should be turned right down when plugging in.
 

Shaun o

Distinguished
It depends.
The pick up coils on an electric guitar don`t or are not pre amped.

The actual amp amplify s the pick up coils.

Now if you connected a source where it was pre amp.
And the volume was set high.

And the actual amp as well, the result would be a pop.
That is the sign of over extending the speaker cone damaging it. In other words it has oscillated the coil.

To far out of where it sit`s. And become stuck.
Attached to the cone of the speaker at the back is a paper tube wrapped with copper wire.

It sits between two magnets.
So if it becomes displaced or stuck it cannot oscillate properly. That results in a tinny sound or static scratching sound. Through overextending the cone, the tube pops right out of the two magnets.
and the tube can be bent or miss-formed causing sticking between the two magnets. as there should be a gap between them and the cone coil. It may just have to be re aligned as its not fully returned inside between the magnets and stuck on the face through over extending the cone.

http://www.djsociety.org/Speaker_1.htm

Or the amp circuit of the guitar amp since you sent a source that was pre amp to it via the keyboard.
 
G

Guest

Guest
So there's no way it could've broken my piano? If so, that's good. And the amp doesn't appear to sound tinny, just occasional static