Re: Favourite strat wiring besides stock
My favorite "trick" Strat wiring is one I came up with. It uses a DPDT switch to give you:
1 - bridge (no tone pot)
2 - bridge, through middle tone pot
3 - bridge+middle in series, through middle tone pot
4 - bridge+middle in series through the middle tone pot, in parallel with neck pickup through neck tone pot
5 - neck, through its own tone pot
So, the back two positions are like the back and middle positions on an Esquire, switching between tone pot or no tone pot on the bridge pickup. Great to have if you play a lot on the bridge pickup, because it lets you get two tones (one bright, one warmer), but both with the cutting "attack" of a bridge pickup. Then you can switch to the middle for a thick humbucker sound, all the way to the front for a stock neck sound, or to the front notch position for a low output, clean, "pretty" notch position sound (all three pickups).
Without the switch engaged, you get standard vintage Strat wiring, but with a few minor differences. The differences are that there is a five-way switch instead of a three-way, and that each tone pot has its own cap.
I also have a neck-on switch on the same guitar, but that is not necessary to get everything I described above.
I like what the PTB system offers in terms of tonal conrol, but unless a guitar has only one pickup, I don't like having a master tone control. Master tone takes away some of the best tones that you can get from the vintage-style wiring by using different settings on each tone pot, and by not having a tone pot on the back pickup.