I've used the 1 vol, one tone, 2 push/pull arrangement.
Seems like a 250K and 500k wired modern (tone connected to input of vol, cap from tone wiper to ground) yields best P-90 tone in terms of chugga chugga.
The Humbucking sounds are bit dark there.
Rewired 50's style, the humbucker sounds wide open and balanced, whereas the P-90 looses girth. Woman tone works best this way (.015 cap), but no QOTSA 'bucker tones rolled back. I believe the 50's wiring takes a great deal of load off the pickups, as the tone pot is in parallel with the output. MUCH brighter!
Is everyone pretty much happy with 500k/500k modern style wiring? Seems like additional resistors in line to ground when switching would give us better balance, ala Tom Anderson's innovative "Vintage Voicing," where a 333k resistor goes in when single coil modes are engaged. Thus, they see 142K with two 500K pots.
Anyone done some 3 or 4P/DT switches with this in mind?
It would be appreciated if some Duncan engineers would chime in. I'd say 99% of customers will NOT have an additional resistor network intelligently integrated into their guitar's electronics, so I'd be interested to know what engineering steps were taken to balance the P90/SC tones from the humbucker tones with a 250K net load in mind. Thanks!
Seems like a 250K and 500k wired modern (tone connected to input of vol, cap from tone wiper to ground) yields best P-90 tone in terms of chugga chugga.
The Humbucking sounds are bit dark there.
Rewired 50's style, the humbucker sounds wide open and balanced, whereas the P-90 looses girth. Woman tone works best this way (.015 cap), but no QOTSA 'bucker tones rolled back. I believe the 50's wiring takes a great deal of load off the pickups, as the tone pot is in parallel with the output. MUCH brighter!
Is everyone pretty much happy with 500k/500k modern style wiring? Seems like additional resistors in line to ground when switching would give us better balance, ala Tom Anderson's innovative "Vintage Voicing," where a 333k resistor goes in when single coil modes are engaged. Thus, they see 142K with two 500K pots.
Anyone done some 3 or 4P/DT switches with this in mind?
It would be appreciated if some Duncan engineers would chime in. I'd say 99% of customers will NOT have an additional resistor network intelligently integrated into their guitar's electronics, so I'd be interested to know what engineering steps were taken to balance the P90/SC tones from the humbucker tones with a 250K net load in mind. Thanks!