DreX
New member
a lot of Strat players avoid 500k vol pots claiming they make their guitar too bright. I've always wondered why they don't just roll off the tone knob a bit and allow themselves the extra brightness, should they ever want it. Someone had said they thought that the there was a difference in tone between using a 250k vol pot, and rolling down the tone knob with a 500k vol pot. That's a hard thing to witness first hand since a Strat only ever has one or the other installed. I'm not interested in proving that person wrong so much as figuring out whether I'm missing out on some awesome warm tones by using 500k vol pots and relying on my tone controls for softening the high end.
To get some data on what the difference might be, I hooked up the wiring with alligator clips, a Lollar Blackflace pickup with a frequency inducer, different tone and vol pots, and I was prepared to try a lot of different capacitors, but what I found using the first cap I tried, a generic .047 uF cap, was that if I swept a 250k vol pot full open, and then swept a 500k vol pot with the tone dial at "8", or 151k ohms of resistance, that the lines overlap completely:
The two overlapping lines on the bottom are the relevant ones, and the other three above just show how much more treble response there is using a 500k vol pot full open, and using 250k or 500k vol pots with no-load tone pots, for even less load attenuation.
This doesn't necessarily mean that there is *no* difference between the two, as an induced frequency sweep test isn't 100% the same as strumming guitar strings, but what it is saying is that for any given inducted frequency of fixed amplitude, the 250k vol, tone @10 / 500k vol, tone @8 deliver the same amount of voltage to the amp. They're pretty dang close, if nothing else.
* edited for clarity
To get some data on what the difference might be, I hooked up the wiring with alligator clips, a Lollar Blackflace pickup with a frequency inducer, different tone and vol pots, and I was prepared to try a lot of different capacitors, but what I found using the first cap I tried, a generic .047 uF cap, was that if I swept a 250k vol pot full open, and then swept a 500k vol pot with the tone dial at "8", or 151k ohms of resistance, that the lines overlap completely:
The two overlapping lines on the bottom are the relevant ones, and the other three above just show how much more treble response there is using a 500k vol pot full open, and using 250k or 500k vol pots with no-load tone pots, for even less load attenuation.
This doesn't necessarily mean that there is *no* difference between the two, as an induced frequency sweep test isn't 100% the same as strumming guitar strings, but what it is saying is that for any given inducted frequency of fixed amplitude, the 250k vol, tone @10 / 500k vol, tone @8 deliver the same amount of voltage to the amp. They're pretty dang close, if nothing else.
* edited for clarity
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