Roland GK-KIT-BG3 Bass

24

MIDI Pickup

  • For bass
  • Kit system, for installation of electronics into a bass
Available since October 2008
Item number 218520
Sales Unit 1 piece(s)
395 AED 100 €
Plus 277 AED shipping
The price in AED is a guideline price only
Since we ship from Germany, additional costs through taxes and customs may be incurred
In stock within 1-2 weeks
In stock within 1-2 weeks

This product is expected back in stock soon and can then be shipped immediately.

Standard Delivery Times
1

24 Customer ratings

4.6 / 5

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18 Reviews

MM
A fine product
Mr. Moore 22.07.2019
I have two of these: one for a fretless and one for a fretted bass. Installation may take some time, depending on your instrument, but it’s a solid upgrade for any instrument. I use them with my Roland GR-55 in the studio and on live gigs. No need to haul any other pedals.
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J
Great hex and MIDI system for bass!
Jon-Inge 04.02.2022
The GK-3b system can be used on most basses to add a hexaphonic pickup to your bass, which enables you to connect to devices with a GK-input (like Roland GK guitar synthesizers and effect units). The installation kit offers the same functionality as the outboard GK-system, with program change and source switches as well as Synth Volume. Takes a little installation effort, but any guitar technician should be able to install this system, and you may do it yourself as well, if you are a little handy with tools. Using the installation kit makes the
When installed and adjusted correctly, the unit provides great string-by-string tracking and subsequent MIDI tracking. Note that the unit itself does not output MIDI signals, and requires the use of a converter (such as the mentioned Roland GK-synthesizers or similar). Also note that tracking below an open A-string will suffer from a bit of latency due to the time required for pitch detection. All in all, the Roland GK unit with a compatible converter or synth device is an excellent entry point to the world of MIDI bass.
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P
Great Kit for the installer
Philip636 26.12.2015
This kit is fairly easy to instal but does require some modifications to your guitar drilling holes for the switches and wires etc! Great if you are confident with your skills. Roland quality kit and once installed works as well if not better than any other bass to midi kit I've used!
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Tricky, but worth the effort.
IOUS 16.07.2023
If you are considering installing this instead of the external one, bear in mind:

As a bass player, you still need to change strings for loose vibration to track better but just enough it doesn't catch any fret buzz, clicks and clacks.

I settled on the DIY pickup kit because it was the cheaper option. Took me a while to measure, drill holes, hide it to an active bass and get this signal sent to Roland GR55 successfully.

It gives you loads of options and sustainability over the external pickup since it's a split signal and doesn't affect your clean tone since you are going to use an extra proprietary cable. It's not a regular 5-pin MIDI OUT, but a 13-pin that only goes to Roland devices. However, you can pretty much send it literally any synthesizer in the chain with MIDI IN.

Your guitar cavity needs to have enough free space for a Raspberry Pi sized circuit board.

No need to learn japanese to understand manual, just use the circuit diagram.

Manual has both active and passive bass diagram. I might even try to put one on a passive bass in future.
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