Re: Not again...???? tone cap question....
The higher the cap value, the most treble goes to ground when the pot is lowered. With a standard PAF replica through an average cable, a 22n cap would remove frequencies above 400hz, while a 47n would lower the cut frequency to 340hz.
That's why 47n (.047µ) is often considered as too high a capacitance for HB's. Folks prefer 22n (.022µ) or even 15n or 10n. Now, I have 47n caps with my TV Jones Classic, which are bright humbuckers, and I've got the Strat tone in my head with a 100n cap.
Actually, you can try anything between 1,5n and 100n (.1µ). The lowest values will act like a mid enhancer and the highest capacitances will give a muddy tone with a lot less volume in some cases. A sweet spot is to find in between, for any guitar and pickup.
The voltage doesn't matter,
theoretically. High voltage caps are just bigger.
I encourage you to try several caps, anyway: those things are cheap and IME, two capacitors of the same theoretical value can change the sound differently, even when the tone pot is full up (I open a can of worms by saying that but hey, it's MY experience of old fart).
EDIT - Ashurbanipal, sorry, we've answered in the same time. I wonder if we mean the same thing by "lowest value" but our replies have the same general meaning.
