Re: Humbucker with 250k pots?
	
		
	
	
		
		
			What would a humbucker sound like on a 250k pot?
		
		
	 
You can hear it for yourself if you have a guitar with humbuckers and 500K pots.
Just turn those 500K pots down to around 
7 to hear what 250K pots would sound like.  It's not a bad sound...but it's not a sound I'd want to be locked into all of the time.
If you go with 250K pots you 
cannot get the sound of 500K pots...but with 500K pots you 
can get the sound of 250K pots by simply turning those 500K pots down to 250K.
There's a reason that "There is a 
small contingent...that prefers one or two 250K/300K pots on bridge PU's" rather than a 
large contingent...and that's that most players prefer the tone of actual '57, '58 and '59 Gibson Les Pauls, ES-335s, etc.  
Those Gibson guitars that created the classic blues and rock tones most of us love had 500K pots...not 250K.
Something else to bear in mind: when the two pickups on a Les Paul or ES-335 are combined you also combine the pots.
Pots are resistors.  Variable resistors.  When you combine two 500K resistors in parallel you get 250K...which is why you lose some treble and output in the middle position on a Les Paul or ES-335.
If you use 250K pots in your Les Paul guitar, when you combine the two pickups you're down to 125K.   That's only 25% of the 500K load that most players think sounds best.
It's also one big reason I prefer the tone of my guitars with a single master volume and single master tone...rather than having two volume and two tone controls to deal with.
But there's only one way to discover what's right for you and that's to experience the effect of both.  
And you can do that by turning 500K pots down to about "7".