themadflyentist
New member
Hello All,
I posted this question in the G&L Forums and was referred here for more expertise. I realize this may not directly related to Seymour Duncan products, I hope that's okay.
I am in the process of pseudo-restoring an early 80's G&L F100 with active/passive electronics. The original pickups were switchable between active and passive, and they had three wires coming off each pickup. My guitar had a pre-amp wired into the circuitry as well, and here is the schematic: http://www.guitarsbyleo.com/GALLERY2/main.php?g2_itemId=3075
The only difference between that schematic and my setup is that on mine there is a small capacitor wired between the "bridge pickup" pole of switch one (S1) and the top left pole of S2 (unused in the schematic). I am unsure of the ramifications of this capacitor.
I only have one of the original pickups and it is badly damaged. OEM replacements are several hundred dollars, and I simply do not have that to spend right now. I did, however, find a relatively nice set of mini-humbuckers that fit in the slots perfectly. The only issue is that the new pickups have only two wires (ground and hot, I assume - one is insulated and one is simply braided). I realize that by using a non-switching pickup I will lose some functionality on the guitar. I am fine with this, I just want to ensure that it's even possible to use these pickups with the electronics I have.
My questions are:
* Can I simply wire the humbuckers to S1 (as per schematic) and then ground them to the VR1 pot (also per schematic)? I would cap/clip the single-coil pickup leads if I did this.
* Does the capacitor wired from S1 likely have any major ramifications? I would need to solder to the pole of S1 where the capacitor is currently connected in order to wire it how the schematic says to.
* Am I missing anything serious? Can I fry anything if these pickups are somehow not compatible?
Thank you so much in advance for any advice.
I posted this question in the G&L Forums and was referred here for more expertise. I realize this may not directly related to Seymour Duncan products, I hope that's okay.
I am in the process of pseudo-restoring an early 80's G&L F100 with active/passive electronics. The original pickups were switchable between active and passive, and they had three wires coming off each pickup. My guitar had a pre-amp wired into the circuitry as well, and here is the schematic: http://www.guitarsbyleo.com/GALLERY2/main.php?g2_itemId=3075
The only difference between that schematic and my setup is that on mine there is a small capacitor wired between the "bridge pickup" pole of switch one (S1) and the top left pole of S2 (unused in the schematic). I am unsure of the ramifications of this capacitor.
I only have one of the original pickups and it is badly damaged. OEM replacements are several hundred dollars, and I simply do not have that to spend right now. I did, however, find a relatively nice set of mini-humbuckers that fit in the slots perfectly. The only issue is that the new pickups have only two wires (ground and hot, I assume - one is insulated and one is simply braided). I realize that by using a non-switching pickup I will lose some functionality on the guitar. I am fine with this, I just want to ensure that it's even possible to use these pickups with the electronics I have.
My questions are:
* Can I simply wire the humbuckers to S1 (as per schematic) and then ground them to the VR1 pot (also per schematic)? I would cap/clip the single-coil pickup leads if I did this.
* Does the capacitor wired from S1 likely have any major ramifications? I would need to solder to the pole of S1 where the capacitor is currently connected in order to wire it how the schematic says to.
* Am I missing anything serious? Can I fry anything if these pickups are somehow not compatible?
Thank you so much in advance for any advice.