Re: Anyone please help me fix a noisy Les Paul??
I read a website that said this is very much false as the human body is terrible at conducting current and would be a terrible ground and that this still happens even when you are in shoes standing on plastic. Not sure how true it is but makes sense to me
http://www.guitarnuts.com/wiring/shielding/shield3.php
Seriously? Humans are 98% water, and the only thing that conducts electricity better than water is more water.
That's why they yell "clear" when they're about to kickstart someone: the electrical charge can pass through to whoever's touching the patient, because we're such great conductors.
And if it's only one guitar doing it, then it's the one guitar. And yes, it does sound like the bridge post insert ground wire (paper clip jammed into a hole) is not touching what it should.
Probably when you changed out the bridge posts, which you neglected to mention? Or the pots, where you clipped this really thick bare wire coming out of a small hole at the back of the cavity away from the pickups?
And your guitar should already have shielded (covered in rubber) wire. Otherwise, you've got bare wires running from your toggle, which is bad.
However, it could also maybe possibly be that your cable which plugs into your guitar just happens to cross a power cable only when you use that one guitar. Sounds bizarre, but you never know how someone's gear is arranged, where the cable might drape over a power supply or power cord only under a specific set of circumstances.
And by no stretch of the imagination should you insert a copper wire into the jack of your amp and stick it to a metal rod in the ground outside. Amps have 3-prong power cables, and electrical sockets have 3 holes, and each has a specific wiring pattern - 2 hot, one ground. The one ground lug should be what runs to the house's ground system (the metal pole in the ground). If this was done, then you simply need to plug into the socket. If you're having ground issues, even in desert environments, have your house wiring checked before you wake up in a fire.