🎶 Elevate your acoustic game—sound clarity that demands the spotlight!
The Imelod Contact Microphone Piezo Pickup is a compact, high-quality pickup designed for a wide range of acoustic instruments including guitar, violin, ukulele, and more. Featuring a durable ABS and braided nylon construction, it offers a 10-inch double-shielded oxygen-free copper cable that minimizes signal interference for clear, loud, and accurate sound. Easy to install without drilling, it comes with versatile mounting options and a bonus microfiber bag for protection and storage.
D**E
Simple Design & Works Well. Great Price
this is a great thing! I’ve had a piezo pick up before on this banjo- a cheapo that worked (cost twice this lol) , but crackled and sounded tinny using the same amp. i attached this one and the same spot and plugged in - it instantly had a warm, clear tone. no crackles and responded well to volume & reverb adjustments. i have yet to attach it with the included velcro- might even just epoxy it to the instrument :) the short wire / cable is a big plus too- perfect length for any stringed instrument, but can see how a longer one would be ideal for a different use. i imagine it would perform the same on any instrument (or item) it was attached to. it came with 6 extra adhesive pads & a cool colored little velvet bag as well. I was wary of the low price, but it works great. 5 big stars thanks :)
J**G
Very Pleasantly Surprised
I am a professional musician. I’ve had many acoustic guitars (including VERY expensive ones) with varying levels and qualities of electronics in them.Acoustic pickups have always had trouble sounding good, primarily because an acoustic guitars sound is the sum of its parts. So using a pickup is only amplifying that one area of the guitar, not the whole.I bought a cheap Gretsch Jim Dandy parlor guitar and I have actually been enjoying it quite a bit. It comes with a sound hole pickup, but that is meant to sound more like an electric pickup than an acoustic.So I figured I’d give this little contact mic a try. I am blown away. It sounds VERY good. It is best to have some sort of EQ (like a pedal) after it so that you can dial in the sound you want, as well as some sort of buffer or boost since it is a passive pickup, but this little pickup actually makes this cheap parlor guitar sound great!It’s still nothing like micing up an acoustic of course, but it is FAR better than the “under the saddle” pickups I’ve tried. Those usually sound very thin as they only pickup the strings themselves, as to where this pickup is amplifying the actual body of the guitar (which means you can get decent low end).If you need something cheap and easy that actually sounds halfway decent, this is perfect.One con is that the input jack fits pretty tight, so you really have to push or pull the cable out to get it to connect. Because it’s mostly plastic I feel this could eventually get damaged with heavy use. But at this price, you could just buy another one to replace it easy.Installation is nothing. I chose to screw the input jack into the guitar and add cable locks as well, but you don’t need all of those things. It comes with a Velcro piece to hold the jack in place.I’m very happy. Would definitely buy another one.
H**
Inexpensive and it works
Well. It works. What else can I say?
M**E
Sounds so good!!
I built an instrument several years ago and put an electric guitar pickup on it and it was fine but it lost all of its character, it is similar to a middle eastern instrument played with a bow. The electric guitar pickup made it sound like an electric guitar played with a bow. I tried a nice mic for a cello and it sounded great but would feed back far too easily. I kept thinking piezo pickup, but they're so inexpensive and blah blah blah. I just assumed cheap and terrible sound. I am man enough to admit when I am wrong, and holy cow was I wrong. I wish I would have start with this, I would have saved a lot of money and wasted time haha. You live, you learn.
T**H
Quick and easy, cheap test.. get what you pay for
I didn't have any expectations, therefore, it's fine... Can't use any overdrive, may help to have EQ or buffer? It doesn't get any easier to install. Cheap but I felt 12$ was too much.. 5$ product in my mind. Fun to hear my little 22 in. Through an amp for the first time..
M**N
Great sound and volume...
Used on a acoustic guitar behind the bridge and it is excelant. Nice volume and tone, much better than other piazo pickups. Also used on a stomp box, which it was great on. I highly recomend this pickup!
A**R
doesnt come with cable so i cant test it
title
B**Y
Great deal and sounds true to the instrument
Super great deal. I attached it to my nylon string guitar. To the body just behind the bridge right in line with the lowest string. Wonderful sound. Sounds pretty much like the guitar without the pickup - only louder, of course. It’s a piezo pickup. Which means it has a piezo element in the plastic disk. Piezos pick up pretty much everything that they are in contact with. Since it’s designed to be a contact pickup (attached to the face of your instrument), it will pick up any sound that is made by that instrument. When you touch the instrument, it hears that sound. When you touch the strings or move your hand across them, it hears that, too. A bump, a knock, a strum, a pluck, whatever happens to the instrument, it hears it. It essentially turns your instrument into a microphone. And since you’ll be plugging it into a PA or amp of some kind, all those sounds get amplified -some more than others. Like with any electronic pickup, you have to be a bit more conscious of what you’re doing while playing or holding or touching your instrument. It’s not as “forgiving” as pure unplugged acoustic playing. A big thing to keep in mind with piezo contact pickups is that they are super sensitive to high pitched sounds. I suggest you place the pickup more toward the low strings. In fact, all the way down to your lowest string. You should get plent of high string sound there. Anywhere near the highe strings and the thing will scream with high pitched frequencies. And feed back will be nearly instantaneous. Placement is everything. Move it around the face of your instrument until you find a sweet spot that won’t be in the way of your playing action. I removed the sticker thing on it. Probably not the best thing for your instrument’s finish. I put Scotch double sided adhesive on it with their ATG roller. That sticks great but not so well that it’s hard to remove. I’ve seen people use ticky tak - that gum that you use to hang posters with on the wall. Even with good placement, you may still have to roll back the highs and mids a bit on your PA or amplifier.
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