SirJackdeFuzz
New member
Re: So I bought a Gibson.
BEAUTIFUL . . . Happy New 333 Day To You Sir !
BEAUTIFUL . . . Happy New 333 Day To You Sir !
BEAUTIFUL . . . Happy New 333 Day To You Sir !
Treat it to a seat rather than the baggage hold.
If that guitar is stock, the volume pots will be 300k linear pots, as most production Gibsons for some time have come with. You might want to consider changing out the 300k's for 500k audio pots if they are the stock ones, the tone pots should already be 500k audio. Luckily, that model has the back plate to access the pots, making it easier to change them out then most ES-type guitars, which are tricky to change pots in. Those are cool guitars, and great for modding.
Al

Marshall half stack? Find a company not trying to make money off their name and you might find a great (not decent amp). I'm a tube man, so are many others.
Do you guys think that the Gibsons that the company ships out to major label artists have 300k Pots, etc?
I loved the Epiphone I used to have.
View attachment 50892
I just sold the 498T that was in my guitar. I'm looking for a replacement and I'm strongly considering the Dirty Fingers, as my epiphone had.
Do you guys think that the Gibsons that the company ships out to major label artists have 300k Pots, etc?
edit: my old marshall half stack makes a cameo appearance in the picture.
Why does Gibson even use 300k pots?
Does epiphone use 500k? if so I can't buy something like the Dirty Fingers and expect it to sound the same.
That's the weird thing, Epiphone guitars use the standard 500k pots in their guitars!. No one seems to know why Gibson keeps putting those damn 300k linear volume pots in the production guitars. Some guys do like 300k volumes on a bright bridge pickup, but linear?. Vintage Gibsons had 500k audio pots all around (vol and tone). Sometime back in the 70's or so they started messing around with pot values, some guitars had 300k volume pots and 100K (!) tone pots. Guys with those guitars wondered why they sounded so muddy, and since Gibson pots have used a proprietary code on them for many years, and not the stated value, players didn't know about the low value pots. Some years ago they seem to have settled on the 300k linear volume pots and 500k audio pots. The Historic guitars have 500k pots all around, but until recently they were using 500k linear volumes, they finally got smart and made them audio pots like the vintage guitars they emulate. It's all very strange.
Al
I'm still wondering why Gibson uses 300k pots. WTF is that about??
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My first guess would be the prevalence of coil splitting? Or compensating for some corner they cut in production components? Possibly cloaking inconsistent/uneven frequency response of stock pickups to make the guitars sound more consistent?
I don't know about that... They sell the same pickups as replacements. Need to be consistent there.