Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to jack

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Re: Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to j

He hasn't replied so I assume all that I said is correct and that he just can't take the honest truth. Maybe he left to troll another forum. Or maybe he's waiting to mature a few more years before replying.
 
Re: Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to j

Yeah, either very young or very immature (or both) leading to an overbearing sense of entitlement. I can't believe this thread hasn't been locked. lol.
 
Re: Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to j

Yeah, this thread is to verbose to be of any value for someone with the same original problem. This could have been solved in 10 posts if he would have listened.
 
Re: Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to j

Just a little info on child psychology and development:

Not only do teens and pre-teens (either in years or mental maturity) think that they know it all, but they think they are entitled to everything they want, when they want it, and how they want it simply because they want it.
 
Re: Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to j

Just a little info on child psychology and development:

Not only do teens and pre-teens (either in years or mental maturity) think that they know it all, but they think they are entitled to everything they want, when they want it, and how they want it simply because they want it.
Yes, that's called being infantile.

Sent from my Alcatel_5044C using Tapatalk
 
Re: Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to j

"Infantile" may be a little extreme, let's just call it "immature".
 
Re: Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to j

"Infantile" may be a little extreme, let's just call it "immature".
Sorry to disagree, but I think that the traits that you described more fit the definition of infantile. I suppose that's a result of what I would call "definition drift".

Sent from my Alcatel_5044C using Tapatalk
 
Re: Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to j

Just a little info on child psychology and development:

Not only do teens and pre-teens (either in years or mental maturity) think that they know it all, but they think they are entitled to everything they want, when they want it, and how they want it simply because they want it.
When my daughter turned 14 by IQ dropped by 20 points. When she turned 24 she apologized and I got the points back;)

Sent from my SM-G960U1 using Tapatalk
 
Re: Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to j

Yeah, possibly.

In any case, I think we all understand what the problem is. (Notice that he hasn't been back since his little tantrum a week ago?) All's well that ends well.
 
Re: Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to j

It’s hilarious that this thread is now nothing but people ragging on the OP. Ha ha ha ha.
 
Re: Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to j

It’s hilarious that this thread is now nothing but people ragging on the OP. Ha ha ha ha.

It never was too much anyway. The OP wasn't the best listener I've ever encountered, which kept the thread from being short and sweet, which would have benefitted countless others who will undoubtedly stumble across it.
 
Re: Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to j

H8ters gonna h8t, tr0lls gonna tr0ll but guitar cavity is done with Jimmy's Page 50s style with PIO caps and Crunchy P8t is getting Alnico 8 magnet swap too in bridge. Might as well call this Custom 8 Crunchy P8t lol

Monster '59 Heritage Cherry Sunburst Gibson Les Paul Standard is gonna have massive tone.

Neck is going to stay stock Vintage 59 just rewired for coil splitting, in phase, out of phase.

Got the 2,3,5,8 magnets today. Pickups will be last to be rewired. Cavity is done, quadruple checked with wiring diagram of honest ppl like Breja Tone Works.

Clean soldering baby. Will measure at output jack with DMM once wired for in phase, out of phase resistance.

49062319697_1c6a0c9827_o.jpg
 
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Re: Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to j

Who did the wiring for you?
Can't see the p/p lugs, but the ground connections look conservative enough with the solder (that's a good thing). Some look like they might be cold joints, however. You might want to re-flow the solder on those.
What do you mean by..."once wired for in phase, out of phase"? From what I can tell, all the p/p pots are already wired.
Also, what do you mean by..."out of phase resistance"? Putting a pup out of phase with another doesn't change the resistance. It only cancels out some of the tonal frequencies.
 
Re: Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to j

Who did the wiring for you?
Can't see the p/p lugs, but the ground connections look conservative enough with the solder (that's a good thing). Some look like they might be cold joints, however. You might want to re-flow the solder on those.
What do you mean by..."once wired for in phase, out of phase"? From what I can tell, all the p/p pots are already wired.
Also, what do you mean by..."out of phase resistance"? Putting a pup out of phase with another doesn't change the resistance. It only cancels out some of the tonal frequencies.

You have no faith in me. I did the wiring. I must say those pots have smaller holes then i thought they did and i even ordered smaller 24 awg cable. 22 awg won't fit threw those holes. 26 awg would be better. There is no way one can do this inside the guitar with alpha pots. They're just too small and i already used magnifying googles.

I used flux paste on top of pots and sanded down top of them to create rough texture for solder to stick better, so there shouldn't be any cold joints. Also solder has 60/40 flux ration on top of that. I'll check for continuity with DMM on those joints. That's quick and simple.

In phase out of phase change resistance from what i've read like one decrease it and one increases it, i don't remember which one does which but if so then it will change resistance at output jack. This might have been in reference to splitting. I'm not there yet. I do things step by step, not everything at once. Have to do switch and pickups next.
 
Re: Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to j

Series vs parallel will change the resistance but changing the phase will not. In series resistances add. In parallel, they divide. Flipping the positive or negative of any one resistance in a passive DC circuit (phase) won’t change the total resistance.
 
Re: Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to j

FWIW, OOP changes the measured inductance.

"HTH".
 
Re: Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to j

You have no faith in me. I did the wiring. I must say those pots have smaller holes then i thought they did and i even ordered smaller 24 awg cable. 22 awg won't fit threw those holes. 26 awg would be better. There is no way one can do this inside the guitar with alpha pots. They're just too small and i already used magnifying googles.

I used flux paste on top of pots and sanded down top of them to create rough texture for solder to stick better, so there shouldn't be any cold joints. Also solder has 60/40 flux ration on top of that. I'll check for continuity with DMM on those joints. That's quick and simple.

In phase out of phase change resistance from what i've read like one decrease it and one increases it, i don't remember which one does which but if so then it will change resistance at output jack. This might have been in reference to splitting. I'm not there yet. I do things step by step, not everything at once. Have to do switch and pickups next.

Sanding joints and flux paste does not change the likelihood of cold joints. You have to have the iron really hot, and get on then off quickly. If the iron is hot and your technique is good, then you will get consistent high quality joints with no sanding or paste. If your iron is too cold then no added extras will help, and the join will be poor and the solder will clump - like I see on the tops of the push-pull casings.
And you might have a connection now, but a cold joint will quickly disconnect under vibration.

And as has been said a few times by others.....in phase and OOP do not change pickup resistance, only output.

Hopefully this time some listening is done.
 
Re: Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to j

You have no faith in me. I did the wiring. I must say those pots have smaller holes then i thought they did and i even ordered smaller 24 awg cable. 22 awg won't fit threw those holes. 26 awg would be better. There is no way one can do this inside the guitar with alpha pots. They're just too small and i already used magnifying googles.

I used flux paste on top of pots and sanded down top of them to create rough texture for solder to stick better, so there shouldn't be any cold joints. Also solder has 60/40 flux ration on top of that. I'll check for continuity with DMM on those joints. That's quick and simple.

In phase out of phase change resistance from what i've read like one decrease it and one increases it, i don't remember which one does which but if so then it will change resistance at output jack. This might have been in reference to splitting. I'm not there yet. I do things step by step, not everything at once. Have to do switch and pickups next.

If you are using stranded wire, even a heavier gauge like 22, you can cut off some of the strands where it enters the lug (only leaving as many strands as will fit through the hole). It will not affect the current at all, but will make the wiring job MUCH easier with those tiny lugs on the p/p switches (not the "pots" themselves, those have pretty good sized holes in their lugs).

As was said...all the sanding, flux, and rosin in the world won't eliminate a cold joint if your iron isn't hot/powerful enough and if your technique isn't great.

"60/40" has nothing to do with "flux (ratio)"!! Where did you get that idea? The 60/40 is the tin to lead ratio of the solder, and you can have 60/40 solder with even NO rosin flux core.

Even with a cold joint, you may initially measure a good contact with your meter, but it may not remain consistent over time and usage giving you nightmare diagnostic problems down the road. Don't rely too much on your meter, it doesn't know everything. Just do the job right the first time.

Again, you're not paying attention. Phase DOES NOT CHANGE RESISTANCE. PERIOD!!! I don't know where "read" that but it is wrong! Or, most likely, you misread it. Series/parallel/ and split will change the resistance, but not phase. You're getting these concepts mixed up. Again (try to listen and understand this time), phase only changes the frequencies, and can change the inductance and perceived output or volume. Again, it doesn't change resistance.

Your head is full of crazy ideas that you need to start learning how to replace with more facts. We've been trying to help you do that but we are met with more resistance than 100,000 miles of 48 gauge wire.

You are the one who has no faith in all of us who are trying to help and teach you. Are you afraid your head is going to burst if you fill it with truth and facts instead of conjecture, assumptions, urban myths, and ignorance?
 
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Re: Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to j

What is "P8t"?
 
Re: Multimeter shows pots resistance instead of pickup resistance when connected to j

This thread is epic. I didn't think to click cuz of the boring title, but then saw it had reached 5 pages and had to see what was up. Itsabass's comment is the best. WTH is going on in here! Lol.
 
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