mamm
New member
Hi folks, long time lurker, first time poster!
I'm having trouble with a Jazz and maybe the collective forum wisdom can shine a light on it. The guitar is an Ibanez RG721RW, fixed bridge, two humbuckers, with a so-called "Ibanez 5-way super switch":
This particular 5-way switch allows these combinations:
I swapped the original pickups to a Jazz neck and a JB bridge trembucker (a combination I love in other guitars). The JB sounds majestic, as it does in some other guitars I have. The Jazz, not so much. It's "pling, pling" territory - it sounds like 90% of the windings are shorted. Very weak signal. But the catch is: when I test the resistance at the output jack, I get 100% correct readings: 7.7K, 1.9K, 5.2K, 2.6K, 16.4K (neck to bridge).
These correct readings at the output jack show, IMHO, that there are no shorts in either pickup and the wiring is done correctly. I'm stumped. What else can I investigate to discover why the Jazz is sounding weak and bad?
I'm having trouble with a Jazz and maybe the collective forum wisdom can shine a light on it. The guitar is an Ibanez RG721RW, fixed bridge, two humbuckers, with a so-called "Ibanez 5-way super switch":

This particular 5-way switch allows these combinations:

I swapped the original pickups to a Jazz neck and a JB bridge trembucker (a combination I love in other guitars). The JB sounds majestic, as it does in some other guitars I have. The Jazz, not so much. It's "pling, pling" territory - it sounds like 90% of the windings are shorted. Very weak signal. But the catch is: when I test the resistance at the output jack, I get 100% correct readings: 7.7K, 1.9K, 5.2K, 2.6K, 16.4K (neck to bridge).
These correct readings at the output jack show, IMHO, that there are no shorts in either pickup and the wiring is done correctly. I'm stumped. What else can I investigate to discover why the Jazz is sounding weak and bad?
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