Zhangliqun
Questionologist
Re: Easy pickup changing solution
Here's a problem the quick-change artists haven't thought of that might finally put an end to these threads. The quick connects obviously have to be at a certain point on the wire. Yes, the end of course. Duh, you say.
But where should the end be -- or in other words, what about lead length? What if they make it long enough for a 335 or an archtop and you want to install it in your Strat? Now it's too long, takes up too much space in the control cavity and rubbing up against the 5-way switch, maybe even bending the lugs or something. Or...what if they make the leads shorter for a Strat and you want to put it in your L5? The controls are now light years out of reach of the short leads.
Some of you might answer that you just either cut the lead for the first example or add an extension for the second example and then reinstall the quick connector on the new end -- but by then you've gone to more trouble than it would been to just solder them in "old school".
Oh and by the way, how do you do quick connect on a 335 when you have to yank everything out through either the F-hole or the bridge pu cavity? Trust me, there's nothing quick about that.
We pickup winders great and small really don't know what the right lead length is for your guitar. It's not quite as big a problem for an all custom-wind little guy but for the medium to large winders, they need to be able to stock the shelves with pickups that will work in any guitar that will take that particular type of pickup, and don't need to be hassled by refunds because the customer didn't check the lead length on the box, etc., or have a stack of Strat length pickups collecting dust on the store shelf because everybody who came in that month needs long leads. It's far less misery to just make it with a universal long lead and let the customer cut it to the right length.
So maybe THAT'S why we don't go quick-connect.
Here's a problem the quick-change artists haven't thought of that might finally put an end to these threads. The quick connects obviously have to be at a certain point on the wire. Yes, the end of course. Duh, you say.
But where should the end be -- or in other words, what about lead length? What if they make it long enough for a 335 or an archtop and you want to install it in your Strat? Now it's too long, takes up too much space in the control cavity and rubbing up against the 5-way switch, maybe even bending the lugs or something. Or...what if they make the leads shorter for a Strat and you want to put it in your L5? The controls are now light years out of reach of the short leads.
Some of you might answer that you just either cut the lead for the first example or add an extension for the second example and then reinstall the quick connector on the new end -- but by then you've gone to more trouble than it would been to just solder them in "old school".
Oh and by the way, how do you do quick connect on a 335 when you have to yank everything out through either the F-hole or the bridge pu cavity? Trust me, there's nothing quick about that.
We pickup winders great and small really don't know what the right lead length is for your guitar. It's not quite as big a problem for an all custom-wind little guy but for the medium to large winders, they need to be able to stock the shelves with pickups that will work in any guitar that will take that particular type of pickup, and don't need to be hassled by refunds because the customer didn't check the lead length on the box, etc., or have a stack of Strat length pickups collecting dust on the store shelf because everybody who came in that month needs long leads. It's far less misery to just make it with a universal long lead and let the customer cut it to the right length.
So maybe THAT'S why we don't go quick-connect.