Re: Ground control for Major Tom....?
Just went through this with an HH Godin. The bridge ground was good. They didn't use shielded wire for most of the switch cavity to the control cavity nor inside the control cavity, from pot to pot. Only from switch to jack was shielded wire. The guitar has conductive plastic pots with circuit boards. I love the feel and taper of those pots and put off running shielded wire for a long time. The wires are soldered to pads on the pcb's, they aren't through hole, so rewiring to the pots would be a pain in the arse. But, I finally had enough of the buzz and swapped the pots out for Bourns mini's and ran all shielded wire. That helped a good deal but still buzzed more than it should have.
I decided to give carbon (graphite) shielding paint a go. So, I pulled it apart again and painted both switch cavities and the pick-up cavities with the shielding paint. 2 coats total. I also wanted to try and use the stock pots again. I drilled the solder pads so I could feed the wires through-hole and solder. That worked fine because the pads were large enough and the traces under the solder mask are larger than the pads. I wired it up again with shielded and it's about as dead quiet as it gets now.
I really was skeptical because I wasn't able to completely coat the wiring channels between the two pickup cavities and between the pickup cavities and the switch and pot cavities. I didn't have any way to reach in and do the tops of those channels thoroughly so I just did the best I could but I made sure that the paint was continuous along the bottom of those channels. I ended up with about 2 ohms checking resistance from the switch cavity to the main control cavity when the paint was dry. Also, I glued some heavy aluminum foil to the bottoms of the cavity cover plates. That makes contact with the shielding paint when they are screwed down.
It wasn't a hard job, just a little time consuming. I had never resorted to shielding a guitar before. I have always owned humbucker guitars, and rarely a single coil guitar, here and there. My Korean imports cavities all have a coat of shielding paint from the factory. Maybe that explains why they are all quiet. The Gibsons I've had were always quiet too (or quiet enough not to worry about). Not sure why this Godin was so buzzy but, problem solved. Also, if there is any change in the tone, it's too subtle to notice. I thought I may have heard a little bit difference after I swapped to shielded wire, maybe. But nothing further after shielding the cavities.
If you don't want to read the book I just wrote, I'll simplify it by saying ... consider shielding the cavities with paint or copper foil/tape. I bought 2oz of shielding paint off of ebay (I think it was 14 bucks). It's the only guitar I needed to do and I didn't want to spend 30+ bucks plus shipping on the stuff at Stew Mac.
Sorry for the book but I wanted to be thorough. I guess I could have still left out the details about the pots.
