Lazarus1140
New member
I apologize if this has been covered. My search for this exact issue has not produced any results.
Please tell me if this is possible ... and if it is, how to do it. I'm building an HSS stratish guitar. I would like to auto split the humbucker so that one of it's coils can be paired with the middle pickup preferrably in parallel. And I would like to do this with a standard 5-way blade switch without push-pull pots or toggle switches (again, if possible). Also, I would like the tone pot closest to the volume pot be for the neck pickup only, and the rear tone pot to be for the humbucker only. So the the middle pickup will not have a tone control.
I wired a guitar like this many years ago, but it was stolen and I threw away my notes when I started trying to go more paperless. And because of my old man bad memory, it's possible that it didn't use a standard 5-way switch. It may have been a Superswitch or Megaswitch.
In switch position 2, the split bridge with its tone control rolled all the way down paired with the middle single coil without tone control plus a little gain produces a slightly honky tone with harmonics jumping at a reasonably low volume.
Please tell me if this is possible ... and if it is, how to do it. I'm building an HSS stratish guitar. I would like to auto split the humbucker so that one of it's coils can be paired with the middle pickup preferrably in parallel. And I would like to do this with a standard 5-way blade switch without push-pull pots or toggle switches (again, if possible). Also, I would like the tone pot closest to the volume pot be for the neck pickup only, and the rear tone pot to be for the humbucker only. So the the middle pickup will not have a tone control.
I wired a guitar like this many years ago, but it was stolen and I threw away my notes when I started trying to go more paperless. And because of my old man bad memory, it's possible that it didn't use a standard 5-way switch. It may have been a Superswitch or Megaswitch.
In switch position 2, the split bridge with its tone control rolled all the way down paired with the middle single coil without tone control plus a little gain produces a slightly honky tone with harmonics jumping at a reasonably low volume.