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  • Pickup phase switch question

    This has probably been covered elsewhere on the forums, but I want to make sure I understand things correctly by making the question relevant to what I'm doing.

    For this example we'll use a HH guitar with a 3 way toggle switch.

    For a pickup phase switch, it's my understanding that:

    1) It doesn't matter which pickup you set to be out of phase--the tone is the same.
    2) The toggle switch has to be in the middle for the sound to work because the pickups have to interact with each other to be out of phase.

    It was my hope that the neck pickup alone could be set out of phase and isolated with the toggle in the neck position. The main reason for this is to thin out a muddy neck pickup, whereas a tone knob might be used to thicken up a bright neck pickup. Ideally this could be done on the same guitar so the neck pickup could always be dialed in to create the desired tone.

    Since my bridge pickup tones don't need to be nearly as versatile as the neck, I'm not as concerned about the bridge.

    So, is there a way to isolate a neck pickup only out of phase, or can it only be out of phase in the middle toggle position?

    If it can't be isolated, the only way I can think of around this is to have independent volume controls for each pickup, turn the bridge pickup all the way down, flick the phase switch, and then only have the neck pickup playing out of phase.

    My understanding is independent volume controls get rid of treble as you turn them down, but hopefully with a phase switch on this might be counteracted somewhat.

    Thanks as always.

  • #2
    1- correct. it doesnt matter which pup you flip the phase on
    2- correct. both pups need to be active in order to get the out of phase sound

    flipping the phase of a pup doesnt do anything until you mix that pup with another one. it is the phase relationship between the two that you are changing. mixing the signal from the two out of phase pups is what causes the sound to thin out. with only one pup active, there isnt another signal to mix with and cancel frequencies

    if you want to thin out a muddy neck pup and you dont use the treble roll off tone control, you could wire that control as a bass cut control instead

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    • #3
      Originally posted by jeremy View Post
      1- correct. it doesnt matter which pup you flip the phase on
      2- correct. both pups need to be active in order to get the out of phase sound

      flipping the phase of a pup doesnt do anything until you mix that pup with another one. it is the phase relationship between the two that you are changing.

      if you want to thin out a muddy neck pup and you dont use the treble roll off tone control, you could wire that control as a bass cut control instead
      jeremy , thanks. I just thought of this, but I'm guessing trying to isolate the neck pickup in an independent volume knob setup also wouldn't work then because you would be silencing the bridge pickup by sending its signal to ground, which would give the out-of-phase neck pickup nothing to interact with?

      This is mostly a sound I hear with Strat guitars used for funk. However I have a guitar with two Triple Shots and adding a phase switch seems like a small addition to make the guitar even more versatile.

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      • #4
        correct, you need signal from both pups in order to get phase cancellation. by adjusting the volumes of the two pups you can get a bunch of different tones but as soon as you turn one pup all the way off, you just have the normal tone of the active pup.

        99% of strats are not wired out of phase. its just the neck/middle or middle/bridge pups wired parallel, in phase. i just wired up a strat and the middle pup is out of phase, the notch tones are awful. ill open it back up and flip the wires to get things back in phase.

        with a lp or similar guitar where each pup has its only volume, then out of phase can be cool/useful. with both pups full up the tone can be super thin and honky, but by adjusting the volumes you can get some fun tones. cant do that on a strat or other guitar that only has one volume

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        • #5
          jeremy , thanks as you have saved me a lot of trouble doing this mod for guitars they wouldn't really work well with.

          Today's specimen was an LTD Explorer with volume/tone, 2 EMG HZ1s (bright, ceramic I think, about 14k--less middy than their 81s and what I would consider EMG's passive PAF style pickup). I have them both with Triple Shots and I thought, hey maybe I can put the neck pickup out of phase if it's too muddy. If it's too bright I can use a tone knob.

          Wiring the phase switch adds some extra time to the job whereas the Triple Shots only need 3 wires each. Going to a regular pot that will be a piece of cake.

          I'm a bit disappointed that the guitar won't be as versatile as what I'd like, but I'm relieved I don't have to do a lot of extra work.

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          • #6
            The HZ1s are pretty bright anyway and if anything they would need darkening in the neck via the tone knob more than thinning out by going out of phase.

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            • #7
              Also thanks for the clarification on Strats and phasing, as I have 2-3 of those lined up in the future as well.

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              • #8
                Try the neck pickup in parallel; that'll be brighter, though without the characteristic OOP mid character.
                The Triple Shot's ability to use just one coil of the neck pickup would thin it out even more.
                If splitting to the outside coil isn't enough, using just the inner coil will be a tad brighter still.

                Unless EMG humbuckers aren't splittable - that would eliminate all the benefits of having a Triple Shot though.
                (My only EMGs are singlecoils in a Strat.)
                .
                "You should know better by now than to introduce science into a discussion of voodoo."
                .

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by eclecticsynergy View Post
                  Try the neck pickup in parallel; that'll be brighter, though without the characteristic OOP mid character.
                  The Triple Shot's ability to use just one coil of the neck pickup would thin it out even more.
                  If splitting to the outside coil isn't enough, using just the inner coil will be a tad brighter still.

                  Unless EMG humbuckers aren't splittable - that would eliminate all the benefits of having a Triple Shot though.
                  (My only EMGs are singlecoils in a Strat.)
                  eclecticsynergy , these are EMG HZ1s that came stock with another used guitar I bought so I decided to use them for a build.

                  They are regular passive four conductor plus ground pickups--exposed pole pieces in neck and bridge positions on top of EMGs usual black casing.

                  My thoughts so far is they are really clean and balanced without the usual mid spike of the EMG 81 or HZ4 (passive 81). Like a passive EMG PAF.

                  They're a little anemic at the moment but I'm sure they'll sound fine in a mix.

                  I discussed my thoughts on the HZ line in another thread and am continuing to give them a try. I'll keep everyone updated as I go.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Inflames626 View Post

                    eclecticsynergy , these are EMG HZ1s that came stock with another used guitar I bought so I decided to use them for a build.

                    They are regular passive four conductor plus ground pickups--exposed pole pieces in neck and bridge positions on top of EMGs usual black casing.

                    My thoughts so far is they are really clean and balanced without the usual mid spike of the EMG 81 or HZ4 (passive 81). Like a passive EMG PAF.

                    They're a little anemic at the moment but I'm sure they'll sound fine in a mix.

                    I discussed my thoughts on the HZ line in another thread and am continuing to give them a try. I'll keep everyone updated as I go.
                    Cool. Parallel is definitely possible then for a cleaner, slightly brighter neck tone.

                    I might go with both options, myself - I too like to have a more singlecoily neck tone on tap for once in a while.
                    And there's no rule that says you cant have a push-pulls or mini toggle for phase too.

                    As confirmed above, OOP sound only works in middle position, and it only works with both pickups set to the same level.
                    If one is turned down lower than the other, you lose the phase cancellation and the tone pretty much reverts to normal.
                    The OOP sound is far less beefy anyway, so most of us just leave both pickups dimed for it I think.

                    On the early PRS guitars, position 2 on the rotary is OOP but the two hums are in series with each other for extra output.
                    It's a great tone; Paul named it "power out-of-phase."

                    .
                    "You should know better by now than to introduce science into a discussion of voodoo."
                    .

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                    • #11
                      I appreciate all the help.

                      I thought putting a phase switch on one pickup would have a small effect on that pickup if it is isolated, but that it would take two pickups to get the full on sound.

                      What makes this tricky is it is a master volume/tone build, as it's just an LTD Explorer. Not a lot of fancy stuff going on in the electronics.

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                      • #12
                        An out-of-phase sound is certainly an acquired taste. I am sure people make a good use out of them, but I haven't ever had one instance where I needed that sound in any live performance or recording I've done.
                        Administrator of the SDUGF

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                        • #13
                          Thanks for chiming in as always with useful comments Mincer .

                          Aren't the Peter Green style pickups from SD especially for this sound? It does make me think of a kind of indie garage White Stripes kind of sound, but for me it's for thinning and brightening cleans as I said.

                          I see some people in YouTube videos just put in a phase switch while others are actually turning the magnet 180 degrees. I assume the latter is for two conductor pickups only.

                          I'm definitely a player who likes a lot of wiring options on his guitar but mainly for studio use and not to use them in a performance. I don't even really like tone knobs. I'm all for everything being stored in a preset through an Axe FX and recalled at the touch of a button.

                          That said, this guy did 42 wiring mods on a guitar and truthfully maybe half or less are useful: https://youtu.be/07w8EADu5Q4

                          But I like having the options. Since I like Floyds and a lot of different tunings the guitar collection adds up quickly if you don't try to make every guitar as versatile as possible.

                          Plus all the wiring practice helps. I finally got the KV3 I was working on sorted out (something about the grounds) and I've started protecting the Triple Shot connections with electrical tape to keep them from possibly shifting since I leave the most lead on the pickups I can in case of re-installations.

                          The Triple Shots aren't as fragile as some people think. There's more room in the pickup cavity than I thought once the pickup is raised to full height, especially on a fixed bridge guitar where I tend to set my pickups very close to the strings.

                          For Floyd Roses, I pull the bar back until the strings go as sharp as they can. If they touch the bridge pickup, I back the pickup down until the string has just enough clearance.

                          For neck pickups, I play at the highest fret until the string touches the neck pickup, then I back it down to give the string enough clearance to vibrate.

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                          • #14
                            Yeah, the Greenies are made for this sound, but you can get it with any PAF-style humbuckers wired out of phase. I also suggest the Triple Shots for an elegant solution to many wiring options.
                            Administrator of the SDUGF

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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Inflames626 View Post
                              . . . while others are actually turning the magnet 180 degrees.
                              Flipping the mag can accomplish two things. If you wire as normal afterwards, you have a somewhat permanent reverse polarity

                              If you also reverse the wiring, (bringing the polarity back), then you can split to inside or outside coils, and remain humbucking, and in phase.

                              A switch would allow you to do either/or and both.

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