Doing pickups justice with Pots. New to it!

I like CTS and Bourns. I also prefer the smoother "damped" feel. The Bourns Sean Silas pots are sweet. (Mentioned here: https://forum.seymourduncan.com/for...l-new-pots-bourns-sean-silas-pots#post6048223)

Note also that many "log" pots, especially cheap ones, are actually two joined linear tracks. Good article here: https://sound-au.com/pots.htm


Had you not posted this graph I could have happily gone the entire rest of my life without knowing log and "antilog" pots have the names backwards. Also the commercial log pot has an audio base (10) and the normal log pot has a base of less than 10.
 
Uh no? Linear turns down directly proportionally to sweep of the knob. Audio turns down quicker.

lin-or-log.jpg

I see your graph but I don't know how to explain it any other way than what my ears here. In all my guitars with 'A' pots it seems like the taper is more gradual and natural. In my guitars that come with 'B' pots(get replaced with A pots) it seems like the taper is more sudden like you would want for a volume swell. That's just show my ears perceive the taper. I wonder if anyone else has experienced this?
 
I've found the opposite. A linear pot on volume produces an even ramp of the volume. An audio pot on the volume produces a significant effect initially, then very gradual effect after that. That is with modern wiring, typical voltage divider wiring. If you are doing 50's wiring, I think there's a possibility the interactions with the tone control could mask what the taper is doing on the volume.
 
I see your graph but I don't know how to explain it any other way than what my ears here. In all my guitars with 'A' pots it seems like the taper is more gradual and natural. In my guitars that come with 'B' pots(get replaced with A pots) it seems like the taper is more sudden like you would want for a volume swell. That's just show my ears perceive the taper. I wonder if anyone else has experienced this?

Do you mean turning up?
 
Do you mean turning up?

Turning volume up or down. Now that I think about it there was a little bit of taper with little effect before the volume started to tank with the linear pot. So I would say from about 9-5 is where I hear most of the taper with little effect on the lower 1-3 part of the taper with linear pots. I'm also using 50's style wiring with most of my guitars so idk if that has any effect on the taper as mentioned above either.
 
I don't notice that with linear pots and playing clean. What I notice with the distortion box on is linear takes forever to turn down and clean up, so audio has a more even sweep.
 
Question, does a *good* pot sound better? Or is it just more heavy duty and can have a longer life? And tighter tolerances?
 
Question, does a *good* pot sound better? Or is it just more heavy duty and can have a longer life? And tighter tolerances?

From my understanding a "good" pot is going to last longer and have tighter tolerances but I think they all sound the same given the same values.
 
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