P
Natural sounding violin pickup
If you're after a natural sound and need some feedback resistance, these are great violin pickups. Pair it with an L.R.Baggs para-acoustic D.I. and you have an excellent system which will give you a natural sound, and no feedback problems! Remember to roll off some lows to reduce handling noise, 2k to remove the nasal quality and some treble if it sounds too scratchy. If you wan't something more permanent on the violin I'd recommend the baggs bridge pickups, and for those of you playing in a quieter ensemble (no drums) then the DPA mics do sound lovely.
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a
Pleasant surprised
I heard mixed reviews about this pick up and used different pick ups and microphones before with my violin. Some pick ups required to re install the complete bridge, which sometimes was annoyed. Therefore i decided to give the fishman still a try, since you just need to push the flip between the bridge wing. I was really pleasantly surprised with the sound, it sounds very natural and already good even without any eq or effects such as reverb. Now i only use this pick up. Very satisfied. I just buyed another fishman pickup for my other instrument to try out
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J
Electric fiddle!
I bought this Fishman V-200 pickup to electrify my girlfriend! (Well her violin anyway)
I decided to buy the V-200 over the V-100 as I felt this had a more solid jack connector. The installation was quite straightforward , all I had to do make the gap on the violin bridge a little wider with a piece of folded up sand paper, insert the pickup 'blade' and attach the jack plug mount. No tape or glue to worry about leaving any residue or removing any finish on your expensive violin.
Sound wise, the Fishman actually performs really well. It needs a little bit of outboard EQ or a pre-amp, as it can be a little bit harsh in the 2 to 3 kHz region, and a wee bit of cut here, in conjunction with a hi pass filter to reduce handling noise can make all the difference. Add some reverb and maybe some delay and it sounds great.
Obviously the Fishman can't and won't out perform a nice mic setup, but where feedback from on stage monitors is an issue, or you need to be heard over a rock band these perform admirably.
The only slight negative is the hard wired connection at the jack end, it might have been nicer to see a separate, removable, heavier duty cable here as it feels little flimsy. However once installed, this shouldn't be a huge worry.
I decided to buy the V-200 over the V-100 as I felt this had a more solid jack connector. The installation was quite straightforward , all I had to do make the gap on the violin bridge a little wider with a piece of folded up sand paper, insert the pickup 'blade' and attach the jack plug mount. No tape or glue to worry about leaving any residue or removing any finish on your expensive violin.
Sound wise, the Fishman actually performs really well. It needs a little bit of outboard EQ or a pre-amp, as it can be a little bit harsh in the 2 to 3 kHz region, and a wee bit of cut here, in conjunction with a hi pass filter to reduce handling noise can make all the difference. Add some reverb and maybe some delay and it sounds great.
Obviously the Fishman can't and won't out perform a nice mic setup, but where feedback from on stage monitors is an issue, or you need to be heard over a rock band these perform admirably.
The only slight negative is the hard wired connection at the jack end, it might have been nicer to see a separate, removable, heavier duty cable here as it feels little flimsy. However once installed, this shouldn't be a huge worry.
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H
Works well
I bought the V200 for a Thomann-brand viola. I decided to fit myself and save luthier charges! I used sandpaper and the "feeler gauges"that used to be used for car spark plugs. I had to track down longer "barrels" for the clamp to suit the larger viola body, and I bought a lightweight 1/4" cable. Plugged straight into an amplifier or mixer, the sound is a little scratchy / treble-y. Put through a guitar EQ pedal (something like Boss GE7) buffered the impedance and let me tweak the sound.
Overall - it took a bit of effort, but the end result is good and wasn't too expensive. I use it in the recording studio and live on stage.
Overall - it took a bit of effort, but the end result is good and wasn't too expensive. I use it in the recording studio and live on stage.
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V
One of the best pick ups i ve tried for violin! easy to use and the design helps a lot! I use it with a lamp pre-amp in order to get a "larger" sound and boost the lower frequencies!
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A
Great pickup, some adjustments needed
Great sound from this pickup, however you need a preamp or boss pedal as impedance is high! Also you may have to make adjustments to your bridge with sandpaper in order to mount the piezio.
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SS
Good for playing violin on loud stages or pub gigs
Can provide a good sound but a little prone to picking up mechanical noise if you have a 'heavy' technique. Works best if paired with a high impedance input such as in a a Boss Tuner pedal or Ge-7 graphics pedal. Not microphone quality sound but needs less anti feedback eq-ing so for noisy stages where a microphone cannot give a solid clean sound then a pickup like this is essential.
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BA
Best Violin Pickup in the World
perfect violin sound reproduction. very good reproduction of violin sound. best product on the market for the price.
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m
Amazing pickup!!
fishman v-200 is an amazing pickup ive been using it for a few days now and i can say super quality highly recommanded
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1S
Very good pickup
First time using this kind of product. Sound is nice and clear. Only cons: - doesn't fit in the bridge straight out from the box, you need to use a really fine sand paper to make some room for it in the bridge of a violin. Ask for a pro to do it, as it's a very sensitive part.
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