I think I am the same way- I couldn't get my tone without a tone control, and I am constantly manipulating it.
I'm not disagreeing. What I read in another thread, one of the users (who ran a Spice simulation, which is an EE program), found that the frequency response of a single 250K vol, will be virtaully identical to a 500Kvol +500K tone (both on 10).
So far, I can confirm that the D-sonic with a 250K vol is much closer to 500k+500k than it was with just a 500K vol. I'd like to try some in-between pot values, using a resistor to create 300,350,400, etc. Having precise control of the top end is important to me. When the guitar has too much presence, I have to lower the amp's treble/presence and the sound has less cut. IN that sense, having a warmer guitar allows me to have a more articulate, cutting tone.
. . . then try it out and see if it works for you.
.someone may even say that the 250k pot is brighter than a 500k pot and even back it up with some data.
I'm not disagreeing. What I read in another thread, one of the users (who ran a Spice simulation, which is an EE program), found that the frequency response of a single 250K vol, will be virtaully identical to a 500Kvol +500K tone (both on 10).
All is a question of situation...
Take two linear volume pots, one measuring 250k and the other 500k.
Full up, obviously, the 500k pot will make the sound brighter.
But once lowered @ 50%, what happens? The linear 250k pot puts 125k only between the pickup(s) and output + 125k between output and ground. The 500k puts twice this resistance on each half of the voltage divider... in such a way that @ 5/10, the linear 250k volume control might/may/could/should make the resonant peak 2dB higher and the tone brighter... at least if other parameters (cable capacitance, input impedance) are typical.
FWIW : hasty sum up of experiments / measurements done here for a long time.
Yes. No. Almost…I’d venture to say that in fact, physical reality is a bit more complex than this… and might change totally according to the context involved.
If you swap a single 250k volume pot for a 500k volume + a 500k tone then compare the sounds with all these pots @ 10/10, you may/might/ could/ should hear (or not) a subtle difference due to the possible influence of the tone cap on upper harmonics... but the difference should be precisely that: "Subtle". And the core tone / overall brightness should stay similar. Reason: the resonant peak should have exactly the same height in the two cases because this prominent frequency is set by the resistive load paired with the pickup(s). A cap between a tone pot and ground tends to change upper harmonics only from 10/10 to 3.5/10 approximatively (then it shifts down the resonant frequency so drastically that it affects fundamental notes, but that’s another story).
As a side note, I’ll just add that paradoxically, the influence of a tone cap on the sound with a tone pot full up should be more noticeable with a LOW value capacitor (like 0.0022µF = 2.2nF) than with a standard one (like 0.022µF = 22nF)... that’s all the mystery of impedance… But you might also notice no difference at all: again, it depends on the physical & musical situation in its globality.
So, I totally agree with the idea that nothing replaces personal experience with such things – and that my wordy clumsy post was therefore not necessary. LOL!![]()
The new guitar with a 500K vol (and no tone control) didn't sound "right" with any of the pickups in there. When I replaced the pot with a 250K, everything sounded great and virtually identical to how the pickup sounded in a 500+500 guitar.
So I agree that one needs to test, but if it wasn't for the "theory" pointing me in that direction, I probably never would have tried it. For a couple reasons:
1) Because "everyone knows" that 500K pots are for humbuckers.
2) Because "everyone knows" that the existence of a 500K tone pot on full makes very little difference to the sound.
IME, the lack of a tone pot made a BIG difference on the top end. (Now I'm going to have to check all the tone caps in my guitars to see what values they are.)
If I had listened to the other side of the argument (or conventional wisdom), I may have stayed with the 500K pot and never bonded with the new guitar.