Shielding pickup cavity.

CarlosG

Member
Hi!
I've been shielding my guitars for years and never gave it a second thought, just every cavity.
However, recently when I shielded my bass I noticed how much the sound had become duller.
Today, for fun, I tried a stainless steel pickguard (non-ferromagnetic grade) and I can also hear that the sound is more dull and with less signal.
Humbuckers have grounded bases and shielded wires (single-coil pickups are a different story). Wouldn't it make sense to shield only the area where the electronics are located (pots, switch, jack)? Perhaps that's why the standard Strat has a shield only where the potentiometers and switches are located?
Theoretically, there shouldn't be any audible difference in sound(maybe minimal), but shielding near the pickups it seems like a bad idea. I'm not sure if Bill Lawrence or Kinman wrote about this at some point, specifically about not shielding too close to the pickups.
 
Shielding filters out RFI, but it also adds inductance, which can affect tone. I believe better clarity, less noise, and better signal to noise ratio at high volumes outweighs any perceived dulling.
 
Any conductor inside the magnetic field of the pickup will dampen the amplitude of the resonance peak. Doing so is also useless (no noise reduction) if the pickup is a humbucker with a shielded wire anyway.

On a Fender style guitar with true single coils you might hear a noise reduction, but these pickups are also most sensitive to resonance peak reduction. A compromise is to use shielded wire with Fender-style pickups but no cavity shielding under the pickups.
 
All stainless is not the same

Some react to magnetic fields and inductance

I want to say 702 is the food grade non ferrous
And the 716 is the construction grade ferrous type

I may have those numbers wrong
I am old btw
 
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