blueman335
Mojo's Minions
Re: 250k pot with SH-2 Jazz
Another way to look at it: Many of us try to get the PU's sounding the way we want, without having to adust the tone controls. The pots on their own filter and change the signal's EQ (without even adjusting them). In a neck PU, you rarely have to turn down the treble, unless its a bright single coil. But in a bridge, treble reduction is often needed, in some manner. I'll put in a warmer magnet to take off excess treble. I find A4's to be very useful when a PU with an A5 is too bright. A4's have a balanced EQ that makes the mids more prominent, unlike A5's which have scooped mids & can seem very bright on some guitars (like a JB).
What you do is up to you, but if it were my guitar, I'd put an A4 in the bridge PU, and wire separate volume pots for each PU. I think necks require 500K's, and most bridge PU's can benefit from one or two 250K pots. I've got a Michael Kelly version of a double-cutaway LP, which has only two pots, that I did this re-wiring to. In fact, the two volume pots are push-pulls, so I can get the each of the PU's in single coil too (8 PU options, instead of the usual 3). Even with a bare-bones two-pot guitar, you can still do some creative wiring. All of this stuff is easy to do; the hardest part is learning to let go of the manufacturer's uninspired wiring, and starting with a clean slate to make the guitar fit your needs.
yes, that's the idea, but... I'm usin' tone control quite often![]()
Another way to look at it: Many of us try to get the PU's sounding the way we want, without having to adust the tone controls. The pots on their own filter and change the signal's EQ (without even adjusting them). In a neck PU, you rarely have to turn down the treble, unless its a bright single coil. But in a bridge, treble reduction is often needed, in some manner. I'll put in a warmer magnet to take off excess treble. I find A4's to be very useful when a PU with an A5 is too bright. A4's have a balanced EQ that makes the mids more prominent, unlike A5's which have scooped mids & can seem very bright on some guitars (like a JB).
What you do is up to you, but if it were my guitar, I'd put an A4 in the bridge PU, and wire separate volume pots for each PU. I think necks require 500K's, and most bridge PU's can benefit from one or two 250K pots. I've got a Michael Kelly version of a double-cutaway LP, which has only two pots, that I did this re-wiring to. In fact, the two volume pots are push-pulls, so I can get the each of the PU's in single coil too (8 PU options, instead of the usual 3). Even with a bare-bones two-pot guitar, you can still do some creative wiring. All of this stuff is easy to do; the hardest part is learning to let go of the manufacturer's uninspired wiring, and starting with a clean slate to make the guitar fit your needs.