freefrog
Well-known member
The choice is yours.I did remove the poles like that in a terrible sounding neck humbucker before. It worked. I think ill try that. Wouldn't removing the 3 poles closest to the neck on the wound strings be better for removing some mud?
So wiring in a .047 capacitor like this wouldn't help?
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Mod Squad: Muddy sounding neck pickup? - Seymour Duncan
Muddy sounding neck pickup? Try Seymour’s quick tech fix By Seymour Duncan Tech Guru Scott Miller People often call and ask how to fix a muddy sounding neck pickup. Some years ago, Seymour taught me a cool trick to fix this exact problem. If you connect a .047 capacitor in series (directly...www.seymourduncan.com
A regular 47nF (.047µ) cap is too high to give a satisfying low cut / hi pass effect. Try 10nF (.01µ) or below. Rickenbacker mounted 4.7nF (0.0047µ) caps for that. Reverend Guitars used/uses 2.2nF (0.0022µ). And again, if you do that, wire the normal low pass / hi cut tone pot BEFORE the series cap if you want these filters to cooperate nicely with each others. G&L did it right in the PTB circuit when it comes to the order of components (but did put the bass cut filter on a 1M pot to make it variable):
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