organictimbre
New member
I’ve got a gig coming up this Saturday and I am almost panicking. My guitar is a 2017 Gibson Les Paul Tribute T. I replaced the stock Gibson 490 pickups with Seymour Duncans; bridge with a 59/custom hybrid and the neck with a 59. Gibson uses the quick connects these days, so I ordered the same quick connect parts and soldered them to the Duncans. I used this color translator https://www.seymourduncan.com/blog/the-tone-garage/humbucker-wire-color-translation to get the color swap correct.
The result is, with the volumes maxed out and the toggle set to the middle, things sound out of phase. When I decrease the volume on either the neck or bridge pickup, it sounds less out of phase, I guess because I’m decreasing the out of phase component in the signal. What I’m wondering is, how could this be possible, assuming I swapped all the colors correctly? Here is a video that shows what I mean. I am playing the same riff on the neck, middle, and bridge.
Here are pics of the stock Gibson setup and of the Seymour Duncans to show the color translation.
The result is, with the volumes maxed out and the toggle set to the middle, things sound out of phase. When I decrease the volume on either the neck or bridge pickup, it sounds less out of phase, I guess because I’m decreasing the out of phase component in the signal. What I’m wondering is, how could this be possible, assuming I swapped all the colors correctly? Here is a video that shows what I mean. I am playing the same riff on the neck, middle, and bridge.
Here are pics of the stock Gibson setup and of the Seymour Duncans to show the color translation.
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