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Help wiring Invader, SSL-5 rwrp, Hot Stack Plus STK-S9b 3 tones, 1 vol, and 5 way

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  • #31
    Re: Help wiring Invader, SSL-5 rwrp, Hot Stack Plus STK-S9b 3 tones, 1 vol, and 5 way

    Originally posted by oshiwei View Post
    The single coil doesn’t work at all, which is why I thought the SSL-5 would have something to do with it. But the single could wiring is the simplest. I checked and as far as I can tell the single coil is wired correctly. It just doesn’t work. Do you think the fact that I am using a 500k pot and a 47 cap could have anything to do with it? Also, it's an RWRP (i.e. reverse wound) pick-up. Will that matter?
    It works! I checked the soldering and it looked like the white wire for the middle single coil was actually touching the pot. I checked the rest of the points and cut that end off. Now it works. But it sounded like there was a little buzz, but it isn't completely together yet. So, I'll let you know once I get it together. If there is a buzz, what would you suggest?
    Last edited by oshiwei; 10-25-2019, 01:57 PM.

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    • #32
      Re: Help wiring Invader, SSL-5 rwrp, Hot Stack Plus STK-S9b 3 tones, 1 vol, and 5 way

      with hum there is a few places I'd check

      firstly if you touch the strings and a serious amount of hum goes away it's a string grounding issue. This is easy to fix
      the connection between pot to pot , i've got something illustrated
      the input jack make sure both wires are in the right places

      if position 2 and position 4 hum than your best bet is to wire the single coil backwards. White goes to black , black goes to white if that makes sense
      Last edited by shadowfire90; 10-25-2019, 02:42 PM.

      Comment


      • #33
        Re: Help wiring Invader, SSL-5 rwrp, Hot Stack Plus STK-S9b 3 tones, 1 vol, and 5 way

        Originally posted by shadowfire90 View Post
        with hum there is a few places I'd check

        firstly if you touch the strings and a serious amount of hum goes away it's a string grounding issue. This is easy to fix
        the connection between pot to pot , i've got something illustrated
        the input jack make sure both wires are in the right places

        if position 2 and position 4 hum than your best bet is to wire the single coil backwards. White goes to black , black goes to white if that makes sense
        [ATTACH=CONFIG]101668[/ATTACH]
        Good news. The hum appears to be the output jack. Not any of my wiring. When I jiggle the cable in the jack, it goes away. I'm going to mess with it more. But for now, I'm waiting for a couple more pieces of hardware. Once I get them and finish the guitar, I'll put up a picture and will share how it sounds, if you care to see/hear. Thanks again for your help. I couldn't have figured this out without you.

        Oh, random question, do you think it's worth it to add the additional resistor to the caps as is often done in various Duncan wiring? I left it off every pot, as it is easy to add later and I wanted to see how it sounds, as is.

        Comment


        • #34
          Re: Help wiring Invader, SSL-5 rwrp, Hot Stack Plus STK-S9b 3 tones, 1 vol, and 5 way

          I'm glad to hear everything went well. I'll break this down in point form a few ideas and such.

          The resistor and capacitor you're talking about as in treble bleeds right? Where you've got a RC circuit (resistor / capacitor) across certain contacts on the volume control. If so I wouldn't bother honestly unless you want more control over the volume. But if your volume pot is already say a B500k I wouldn't worry too much. Stewmac has a good video on the subject "Good tone 10 to 0" or similarly titled. I'd say 90% of the builds I'd do for my online and local sales when I used to buy and sell gear I'd just use linear pots like Ibanez tended to and most guys looked at it as an improvement. This will give you an idea if it's something you'd like. Buy all these parts off of ebay. A seller like tayda2009. It'll be way cheaper. The amount of money you'd spend on a few bags of capacitors is cheaper than going here. But they did a great demo of it.



          I've seen others using resistors to drop the resistance of the entire pickup selection to warm up guitars but it goes between over kill and subtle differences at least in my experience

          capacitors can filter the output of pickups - you put a low valued one before it hits the switch, it can be useful. 0.01uf (10nf) to 0.047uf (47nf) i'd try. However by putting one in without say a super 5 way switch say your invader would never get as brutal or aggressive with it perminantly filtered. The lower the nano farad (NF) the less frequencies it cuts. I'd start off at 10nf and maybe 33nf maximum I'll have a few diagrams.


          the best tone controls I tried that are passive as in no batteries and simple to try are
          the fender greasebucket tone control - its a passive filter very similar to the standard tone control. To my understanding the left hand side of it where a resistor and capacitor are in series the resistor limits the tone from ever reaching 0. The bass cut happens with the much higher valued tone capacitor. It was a favorite of mine for years but in builds with both a standard and greasebucket tone it was too similar so I had to get more creative.

          torres mid boost and scoop
          - there are two ways to do this
          the basic way - just an audio transformer. 1H - 5H spectrum. The Xicon 42TL021 AND Xicon 42TL018 are the two I believe I used. The 42TL021 is used in a few mods. This cuts bass and treble in such a way that it sounds like you're turning your mid control down on an amp. The 42TL018 I never did figure out what to change as it's a stronger transformer and this guitar pedal forum all people wanted to do was "pick measure". I think 2 posts in I deleted my account.

          the advanced way Dan Torres came up with. This one looks tricky to do but isn't. It uses an audio transformer and 4 components. Your tone control has to be at 5 otherwise you shift the sound one way or another. towards 10 it'll be similar to your standard tone control. However when you turn it down it thins out the sound. The only issue with it is

          to make the invader brighter and less compression my personal favorite is to just add a switch to bypass all the controls called a blower switch I'd have to draw out and explain to you but these are some ideas

          these are either really old images from when I was starting out about 10+ years ago or stuff I got off of other forums


          torres mid scoop/boost


          Comment


          • #35
            Re: Help wiring Invader, SSL-5 rwrp, Hot Stack Plus STK-S9b 3 tones, 1 vol, and 5 way

            Originally posted by shadowfire90 View Post
            I'm glad to hear everything went well. I'll break this down in point form a few ideas and such.

            The resistor and capacitor you're talking about as in treble bleeds right? Where you've got a RC circuit (resistor / capacitor) across certain contacts on the volume control. If so I wouldn't bother honestly unless you want more control over the volume. But if your volume pot is already say a B500k I wouldn't worry too much. Stewmac has a good video on the subject "Good tone 10 to 0" or similarly titled. I'd say 90% of the builds I'd do for my online and local sales when I used to buy and sell gear I'd just use linear pots like Ibanez tended to and most guys looked at it as an improvement. This will give you an idea if it's something you'd like. Buy all these parts off of ebay. A seller like tayda2009. It'll be way cheaper. The amount of money you'd spend on a few bags of capacitors is cheaper than going here. But they did a great demo of it.



            I've seen others using resistors to drop the resistance of the entire pickup selection to warm up guitars but it goes between over kill and subtle differences at least in my experience

            capacitors can filter the output of pickups - you put a low valued one before it hits the switch, it can be useful. 0.01uf (10nf) to 0.047uf (47nf) i'd try. However by putting one in without say a super 5 way switch say your invader would never get as brutal or aggressive with it perminantly filtered. The lower the nano farad (NF) the less frequencies it cuts. I'd start off at 10nf and maybe 33nf maximum I'll have a few diagrams.


            the best tone controls I tried that are passive as in no batteries and simple to try are
            the fender greasebucket tone control - its a passive filter very similar to the standard tone control. To my understanding the left hand side of it where a resistor and capacitor are in series the resistor limits the tone from ever reaching 0. The bass cut happens with the much higher valued tone capacitor. It was a favorite of mine for years but in builds with both a standard and greasebucket tone it was too similar so I had to get more creative.

            torres mid boost and scoop
            - there are two ways to do this
            the basic way - just an audio transformer. 1H - 5H spectrum. The Xicon 42TL021 AND Xicon 42TL018 are the two I believe I used. The 42TL021 is used in a few mods. This cuts bass and treble in such a way that it sounds like you're turning your mid control down on an amp. The 42TL018 I never did figure out what to change as it's a stronger transformer and this guitar pedal forum all people wanted to do was "pick measure". I think 2 posts in I deleted my account.

            the advanced way Dan Torres came up with. This one looks tricky to do but isn't. It uses an audio transformer and 4 components. Your tone control has to be at 5 otherwise you shift the sound one way or another. towards 10 it'll be similar to your standard tone control. However when you turn it down it thins out the sound. The only issue with it is

            to make the invader brighter and less compression my personal favorite is to just add a switch to bypass all the controls called a blower switch I'd have to draw out and explain to you but these are some ideas

            these are either really old images from when I was starting out about 10+ years ago or stuff I got off of other forums
            [ATTACH=CONFIG]101709[/ATTACH]

            torres mid scoop/boost
            [ATTACH=CONFIG]101708[/ATTACH]
            [ATTACH=CONFIG]101710[/ATTACH]
            [ATTACH=CONFIG]101711[/ATTACH]
            It sounds amazing! Absolutely no buzz. I adjusted the jack and finished everything up. This is literally the best sounding guitar I have ever owned/played. Thank you so much for your help. It has been a long and challenging journey, but I have finally built the guitar I always wanted from scratch. Thanks again. I'll upload a pic and vid once I get everything adjusted.

            Comment


            • #36
              Re: Help wiring Invader, SSL-5 rwrp, Hot Stack Plus STK-S9b 3 tones, 1 vol, and 5 way

              I'm happy it turned out so great, yeah in the future if you've got any wiring questions feel free to message me privately as I'm always near a computer. Though there are a ton of us on here that are just as helpful.

              Hope you enjoyed your weekend I'm still considering it monday

              Comment


              • #37
                Re: Help wiring Invader, SSL-5 rwrp, Hot Stack Plus STK-S9b 3 tones, 1 vol, and 5 way

                I fixed the jack issue. But the humbucker sounds weak. Not bad, just paper thin. Overall, though, it sounds amazing. Everything is together now. I'll PM you the pick of the strat I built and an audio clip to show you how it sounds. I really appreciate the help.
                Last edited by oshiwei; 10-29-2019, 09:19 PM.

                Comment


                • #38
                  Re: Help wiring Invader, SSL-5 rwrp, Hot Stack Plus STK-S9b 3 tones, 1 vol, and 5 way

                  So, I've been adjusting the action, pickups, etc. and I now have good playability, but it has a weird fuzzy noise when I play hard chords. I've been googling and found info about the pickups not being at an even level with one another or the action being too low. But I have other guitars with the action this low and they're fine. I also have the pickups as close to one another as seems possible. But it still has a static. What do you think?

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Re: Help wiring Invader, SSL-5 rwrp, Hot Stack Plus STK-S9b 3 tones, 1 vol, and 5 way

                    usually i put the bridge pickup as close to the strings as possible as I'm not too worried about sustain when I plug my guitar in and it gives me all the extra power I want. I'm curious what others think on here as well. Record something and post it on youtube or similar sites to see if people can spot the problem.

                    The ways I think of this is
                    is the fizziness something you hear when the guitar is unplugged as well as in the amp if so i can imagine it's fret buzz. It happens when there is a change of seasons as the humidity can change dramatically throughout the year or the strings are off the guitar you have to adjust the trussrod. If so an adjustment of the trussrod will do the trick. Always use the right allen key and don't force the neck if it doesn't want to turn more than we feel it should. The worst we can do is use a screw driver. I've seen this on two guitars of the ones I flipped and would be furious and realize why I got such good deals. A low end LTD explorer (LTD EX50) with a working EMG 81/85 pickup set for under 75$ american I wouldn't get any other time that's for sure.

                    With hum assuming the guitar is properly shielded and single notes aren't the issue where you can put your hands away from the strings and get no fizziness or hum the guitar wiring is fine.

                    to know a guitar is properly shielded it depends on the factory
                    with Schecter, LTD , Squier , Jackson , Washburn and higher end BC Rich I've seen flat black paint being used, if that's the case don't worry about it, your guitar is shielded
                    alumium or copper tape can shield a guitar too - I suggest copper tape
                    if you see just the same color paint on the body as inside the control cavity or similar copper tape is your best bet. You need 6-10ft (2-3m) and you're set. It's dirt cheap on ebay if you don't mind waiting a few weeks from China as it's ridiculous what it goes for in America. 20$ I swear was what Dimarzio wanted a while ago versus 2-3$ in China.

                    With copper tape to install it properly just cover the whole entire guitar body in it on your strat now place a wire between the:
                    copper tape itself - solder sticks on very easily
                    to the back of any potentiometer
                    if you ever do a les paul remember to solder a wire to each pickup cavity. Neck humbucker to Bridge humbucker, bridge humbucker to the back of a volume or tone pot.

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Re: Help wiring Invader, SSL-5 rwrp, Hot Stack Plus STK-S9b 3 tones, 1 vol, and 5 way

                      Originally posted by shadowfire90 View Post
                      usually i put the bridge pickup as close to the strings as possible as I'm not too worried about sustain when I plug my guitar in and it gives me all the extra power I want. I'm curious what others think on here as well. Record something and post it on youtube or similar sites to see if people can spot the problem.

                      The ways I think of this is
                      is the fizziness something you hear when the guitar is unplugged as well as in the amp if so i can imagine it's fret buzz. It happens when there is a change of seasons as the humidity can change dramatically throughout the year or the strings are off the guitar you have to adjust the trussrod. If so an adjustment of the trussrod will do the trick. Always use the right allen key and don't force the neck if it doesn't want to turn more than we feel it should. The worst we can do is use a screw driver. I've seen this on two guitars of the ones I flipped and would be furious and realize why I got such good deals. A low end LTD explorer (LTD EX50) with a working EMG 81/85 pickup set for under 75$ american I wouldn't get any other time that's for sure.

                      With hum assuming the guitar is properly shielded and single notes aren't the issue where you can put your hands away from the strings and get no fizziness or hum the guitar wiring is fine.

                      to know a guitar is properly shielded it depends on the factory
                      with Schecter, LTD , Squier , Jackson , Washburn and higher end BC Rich I've seen flat black paint being used, if that's the case don't worry about it, your guitar is shielded
                      alumium or copper tape can shield a guitar too - I suggest copper tape
                      if you see just the same color paint on the body as inside the control cavity or similar copper tape is your best bet. You need 6-10ft (2-3m) and you're set. It's dirt cheap on ebay if you don't mind waiting a few weeks from China as it's ridiculous what it goes for in America. 20$ I swear was what Dimarzio wanted a while ago versus 2-3$ in China.

                      With copper tape to install it properly just cover the whole entire guitar body in it on your strat now place a wire between the:
                      copper tape itself - solder sticks on very easily
                      to the back of any potentiometer
                      if you ever do a les paul remember to solder a wire to each pickup cavity. Neck humbucker to Bridge humbucker, bridge humbucker to the back of a volume or tone pot.
                      Yeah, it isnĀ’t fret buzz. I already adjusted the truss rod and bridge to get the action I want. I adjusted the pickup height, too. The fuzz IĀ’m hearing is something that occurs only when I play strong chords. It isnĀ’t from the wiring or the strings hitting anything; there is no buzz when itĀ’s unplugged, when IĀ’m playing solos, or when itĀ’s just sitting there silent, plugged in. ItĀ’s an electronic noise that sounds kind of like a speaker that is being overloaded with a frequency range it canĀ’t handle. The thing is IĀ’m playing into my DAW, not an amp. So, I donĀ’t know what is causing it. IĀ’ll upload an audio clip when I get a chance to record one.

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Re: Help wiring Invader, SSL-5 rwrp, Hot Stack Plus STK-S9b 3 tones, 1 vol, and 5 way

                        That almost sounds like you are overdriving the input. Does it go away when you lower the pickup?
                        Administrator of the SDUGF

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          Re: Help wiring Invader, SSL-5 rwrp, Hot Stack Plus STK-S9b 3 tones, 1 vol, and 5 way

                          It's weird, because it's intermittent. It will be fine one minute and then I'll switch to a different pick-up or will adjust the tone or volume and it will start. Maybe it is the wiring.

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            Re: Help wiring Invader, SSL-5 rwrp, Hot Stack Plus STK-S9b 3 tones, 1 vol, and 5 way

                            Originally posted by Mincer View Post
                            That almost sounds like you are overdriving the input. Does it go away when you lower the pickup?
                            No, it doesn't. The entire sound just gets softer. I lowered them as far as they can go and it is still there. Just softer.

                            Comment

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