59 neck

rombola

New member
i just got a 59 neck for my les paul the thing is that the stock one was a 2 conductor cable , and the duncan is a single conductor , where does it go connected to the first little thing in the pot or in the back of the pot?
please any help
 
Re: 59 neck

On a Duncan two conductor, which you have......The silver shielding gets trimmed back then, you connect the small black wire to that same pole on the pot that the stock hot wire went to. The shielding then gets soldered down to the base of the pot. On a 4 conductor Duncan, the black is +, the green/silver twisted is ground, and the red/white wires get twisted/soldered/and taped down so they make contact with nothing......unless you've got fancy phase/splitcoil switches.
 
Re: 59 neck

The braided shield wire goes to the back of the volume pot (= to ground) and the Black wire goes to one of the lugs of the pot.(the first little thing ;) ) There's a schematic on the Duncan site.
 
Re: 59 neck

it doesnt have a color its just plain wire and in the back of the seymour duncan box say single conductor 59 neck
 
Re: 59 neck

It has wire braiding on the outside, right?

Inside the wire braiding is a layer of cloth insulation. Inside the insulation is a wire core. If it's a new pickup the ends haven't been trimmed back at all.

You need to strip back the metal braid and also trim the end of the cloth insulation to expose the end of the wire core. The wire core is the hot connection that goes to the lug of the volume pot. The outer braid is the ground - you solder that to the back of the pot.

Does anyone have a pic of a control cavity with a single-conductor pup wired in?
 
Re: 59 neck

Simon_F said:
You need to strip back the metal braid and also trim the end of the cloth insulation to expose the end of the wire core. The wire core is the hot connection that goes to the lug of the volume pot. The outer braid is the ground - you solder that to the back of the pot.
Exactly what you need to do. Is this a second hand pickup by any chance?
 
Re: 59 neck

hey also if is not long enough can i add a piece of wire from the old stock pick ? just solder a lilttle piece to make it longer? can i?
 
Re: 59 neck

rombola said:
hey also if is not long enough can i add a piece of wire from the old stock pick ? just solder a lilttle piece to make it longer? can i?

Can you see the ground conductor? If you do and it is solded to the baseplate then you can solde another wire to the baseplate and use it a as a ground conection. If everything it is conected in the right way inside the pickup then everything will work fine.

In case you want to check it you can remove the four screws from the baseplate. Becareful because the magnet will be realeased and it could fall. It has to be in the same orientation to work in the right way. Now you will be able to examinate both coils. You shoud be able to see the 4 wires, one from the begining and the end of each coil. One shoud be conected to the single conductor wire. Two of then (one from each coil) should be conected toghether to achieve the series configuration. Finally there should be a remainig wire that should be conected to baseplate or just unsoldered. This is the one that should be conected to the ground.
 
Re: 59 neck

Here ya go, I took this from guitarnuts.com. I pasted all of it because of the pictures alone wouldn't make sense.

Separating Shield Braid From Inner Conductors:

Separating the inner conductors from the braid of shielded wire is one of those things that few people do cleanly and no one enjoys. Even many experienced techs end up with a rather ugly mess if more than a half-inch of braid needs to be separated. Here is a technique that is forehead-slapping obvious yet I was an electronics tech for many years and worked with dozens of other techs before I ever encountered it.

You will need a pointed instrument. A dentist's pick works great. A straightened paper clip can be used in a pinch. Avoid using a knife point as it is likely that you will end up cutting some of the fine strands of wire.

1. Strip the outer insulation from the shielded cable. Be very careful not to cut any of the fine strands of wire that make up the shielding braid.

separate1.jpg


2. Using a pointed instrument carefully "pick" a hole in the braid. Be careful not to cut or break any of the fine strands of wire, just form a hole in the weave of the braid by pushing the strands aside.

separate2.jpg


3. Bend the cable sharply where you picked the hole in the braid. Make sure that the hole is facing away from the bend. Use your dental pick or similar instrument to work a loop of the inner conductor(s) out through the hole in the braid.

separate3.jpg


4. Keep pulling on the loop of inner conductor until the loose end comes completely free of the braid.

separate4.jpg


But since you got it 2nd hand you might have a pickup without the braid wire because someone removed it.
 
Re: 59 neck

my pickup has the metal braid and inside is the cloth thing and then inside the cloth is just plain wire ! so if the other wire is missing what can i do?
 
Re: 59 neck

Yes, the outer metal braid is soldered to the pot. If you have separate volume controls, the wire from inside the cloth gets soldered to the first lug. If you are just using one volume, you can wire it directly to the switch. Then from the switch, solder a wire from the middle position (shared) to the first lug on the volume pot.

MJ
 
Re: 59 neck

rombola said:
but what can i do if is not long enough?


You can sold a wire with the appropiated length to the metal braid and use it as the ground conductor. You can do it in the same way for the hot wire.
 
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