Re: Making my Les Paul Sound Better
I test pickups through a harness that has a Tele style three-way switch, between a 250/250/47 and a 500/500/22 setup, and one where I have more things to pick from (load capacity, LCR network etc, switch between different vol pot values and use one of 4 or 5 capacitors for the tone pot). When doing a test 1:1 like this you will notice a real difference when switching all parameters at once, but just switching one of the pots or the capacitor is not that obvious.
If your only test is to solder up a new pickupguard and then play it's no wonder the mind is playing tricks.
First, you gotta tell me how you rigged this setup as it sounds like a pretty sweet way to test pickups. I'd be very interested in trying this out.:bowdown:
Secondly, I'm being honest in saying that I have only been messing with pickups, pots, and caps for a year, so my knowledge base and experience probably pales in comparison to yours. So I am listening. But the advice that has guided me in switching pots came from different local techs I know, each with around 30 years experience working on guitars. I feel confident in their suggestions. Lou doesn't believe in messing with caps as to him, like you're suggesting here, it doesn't make any noticeable difference. I did it because caps are cheap and I figured, why not? Mark suggested that if I wanted the pots to have an effect, the volume would have a bigger effect then the tone pot. He did suggest, just as you did, that if I wanted a profound effect, I needed to change the whole setup: volumes, tones, and caps together. On a different guitar I switched out a tone pot in an attempt to take out some of the brightness. I didn't hear any noticeable difference like both Mark and you are suggesting. When I changed the volume instead, I thought the guitar sounded a little less bright. Not dramatically, but enough to make me happy.
Look, maybe you are right and I am hearing something that isn't there, but I do believe that I am hearing something. And I would ask you grant me the following. The placebo effect basically states that you will experience whatever type of difference that you expect. Wishful thinking will create what you want to hear. But that isn't what happened in this case. I was really hoping that by changing the two volume pots I would get the tone I want and be happy. That's what I wanted. I got the opposite. To my ears, the clarity suffered and I didn't get any more warmth. It also seemed to have a greater impact on the neck than on the bridge which caught me off guard. :dunno: Complete 180 degrees from what I was looking for.
My take away from what you're saying is that messing with one pot or cap is a waste of time. If I want a meaningful difference, I gotta change the whole set-up. Suggestion respected and accepted. Given what others are saying here though, I think a total control swap would make a muddier tone, which i don't want, and I think that you have suggested the same thing. Maybe, the best thing I can take away here is that if this pickup set-up is at 8/10ths the tone I want, then I just need to man-up and try different pickups. Or at least try Itsa's suggestion.
BTW, I didn't expect to get as much input as I did on this thread and I really appreciate it. So feel free to add anything more, I'm enjoying reading it. Even you want to tell me it's all in my head :smash: