Re: Gus G Fire Review
All I can say at this point is that sound clip (noise) sounds nothing like any Gus G or any pickup into a BMP I've ever heard. There is always the chance of something faulty, but you're telling me that you can "beep test" from any ground terminal on the BMP to the foil, the ground at the output jack, etc. so I have no place to go. Personally I would never assume that the pot's physical contact with shielding tape would establish a strong ground for the BMP. I would still solder a wire to a known ground, and screw it into one of the BMP ground terminals. I'm not saying that would solve your problem, just that long term you should have a stronger connection to ground than that.
After this, you can try a different pickup(s) into the BMP and if the noise is better then the problem is in the pickups. If not, the problem remains in the preamp or the wiring. Either way we'll replace anything/everything for you, I'd just like to get it isolated first.
Thanks Frank,
Here are some pictures of the rewired setup identical to the wiring diagram minus the tone pot.
As for grounds. The ground lead soldered to the output jack connects to the ground terminal to the BMP. This automatically grounds the volume control because it is directly solderdd to the BMP in two places, the sheild and the pot leg.
With the unit out and not installed you will get zero ohms between the ground screw terminals and the ground leg of the pot and the pot housing itself. So the BMP is properly grounded to the output jack. But for verification, I did connect the BMP to the bridge ground no change, then connected the pot housing to ground, no change. Also usually ground issues are noticed by changes occurring when you touch a control or metal part on the guitar, doing this has no effect.
I did connect a Bare Knuckle Warpig (ceramic) 21.5K DC resistance, very hot pickup, and the noise was reduced significantly. You would think with a hotter pickup it would get louder. I saw that you had posted on another forum that the BMP-1 rejects noises within the preamp, but if the pickups were noisy, that could be the source of hum. From what I can tell the BMP-1 rejects noise generated by the preamp itself, but not from the pickups like a digital active canceling system like Bose first came out with.
But one thing Frank I noticed in the very beginning. Every single Seymour Pickup I have ever seen, opened and installed, has the conductor cable leaving the lower right hand corner of the pickups if you are looking at the pickup from the guitar front side. Even the Gus G pictures show this. But these pickups have the cable leaving from the Top left.
Now before you say it! LOL They are installed correctly, the adjustment screws are on the top row for the neck and on the bottom near the bridge on the bridge pickup and the Seymour Duncan logo is on the bottom of the pickups. I will send you a pic as well.
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/26196875/1.JPG
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/26196875/2.JPG
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/26196875/3.JPG
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/26196875/4.JPG
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/26196875/5.jpg
Also let me say that from aside from the noise, these are awesome sounding pickups, excellent touch sensitivity not over the top muddy gain and clean up nicely.