ratherdashing
Kablamminator
I was reconditioning a couple of old speakers I have, and in the process I learned about the relationship between the value of a capacitor, the load on a circuit, and the audio frequency rolled off by that cap. I thought it would be helpful to share this info as it relates to guitar tone caps.
The crossover frequency, as it is called in speaker circuits, is the point in the frequency spectrum at which the capacitor acts as a high pass filter (only frequencies above a certain point get through). When you have two speakers in parallel where one speaker is designed to handle higher frequencies than the other (like in a home stereo or PA speaker cab), a capacitor is used to pass the highs to the smaller speaker. What's left is collected by the larger speaker.
In a guitar's tone circuit the same principle applies, but the "high pass" is actually passing the highs to ground leaving the lows behind, so it more or less acts as a low pass filter. With the tone knob all the way "on", you are hearing the full effect of the low pass circuit.
The frequency at which the crossover occurs is determined by the capacitor value, and the load on the circuit. In the case of an electric guitar, the load is the pickup. The formula to calculate the crossover frequency is:
C is the capacitance in farads. Caps for guitars are usually expressed in microfarads; to convert to farads, multiply the value by 0.001.
Rh is the total load on the circuit in Ohms. This will be the load of your pickup. Example: a Duncan Custom has a 14,100 Ohm load.
F is the frequency in Hz.
Here's an example: let's calculate the crossover of a Custom with a .022 uf capacitor, tone control cranked full on:
0.159/(C x Rh) = 0.159/(14,100 Ohm x 0.00022 f) = 512.6 Hz
With your tone control on 1, all frequencies above 512.6 Hz are passed to ground.
So how much difference does the cap value make? Let's change it to a 0.47 uf cap.
0.159/(C x Rh) = 0.159/(14,100 Ohm x 0.00047 f) = 239.9 Hz
Big difference! The .047 uf cap will pass way more of the frequency spectrum to ground, resulting in a much bassier tone.
This, of course, is all with the tone knob as far down as it will go. With the tone knob on 10, we're introducing a much bigger load to the circuit: the pot.
"Hold on a minute," you say. "According to that formula, increasing the load will pass MORE highs to ground, not less! We all know that's not what happens when you turn up the tone knob. What's up?"
Stay tuned for the answer ...
The crossover frequency, as it is called in speaker circuits, is the point in the frequency spectrum at which the capacitor acts as a high pass filter (only frequencies above a certain point get through). When you have two speakers in parallel where one speaker is designed to handle higher frequencies than the other (like in a home stereo or PA speaker cab), a capacitor is used to pass the highs to the smaller speaker. What's left is collected by the larger speaker.
In a guitar's tone circuit the same principle applies, but the "high pass" is actually passing the highs to ground leaving the lows behind, so it more or less acts as a low pass filter. With the tone knob all the way "on", you are hearing the full effect of the low pass circuit.
The frequency at which the crossover occurs is determined by the capacitor value, and the load on the circuit. In the case of an electric guitar, the load is the pickup. The formula to calculate the crossover frequency is:
0.159/(C x Rh) = F
C is the capacitance in farads. Caps for guitars are usually expressed in microfarads; to convert to farads, multiply the value by 0.001.
Rh is the total load on the circuit in Ohms. This will be the load of your pickup. Example: a Duncan Custom has a 14,100 Ohm load.
F is the frequency in Hz.
Here's an example: let's calculate the crossover of a Custom with a .022 uf capacitor, tone control cranked full on:
0.159/(C x Rh) = 0.159/(14,100 Ohm x 0.00022 f) = 512.6 Hz
With your tone control on 1, all frequencies above 512.6 Hz are passed to ground.
So how much difference does the cap value make? Let's change it to a 0.47 uf cap.
0.159/(C x Rh) = 0.159/(14,100 Ohm x 0.00047 f) = 239.9 Hz
Big difference! The .047 uf cap will pass way more of the frequency spectrum to ground, resulting in a much bassier tone.
This, of course, is all with the tone knob as far down as it will go. With the tone knob on 10, we're introducing a much bigger load to the circuit: the pot.
"Hold on a minute," you say. "According to that formula, increasing the load will pass MORE highs to ground, not less! We all know that's not what happens when you turn up the tone knob. What's up?"
Stay tuned for the answer ...
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