To the jack!

Seashore

New member
It turns out I'm just a huge fan of the way the right bridge humbucker sounds when it's wired right to the jack on a Gibson. I wired up an old Warpig with a ceramic magnet to the jack in my 7 string LP and it sounds and feels phenomenal. I only had it wired up this way to check and make sure the pickup was ok, because I couldn't get the quick connector wiring right; I finally figured it out and got it all set up properly, and wouldn't you know, I didn't like it anywhere near as much. I missed the brightness, pick attack, and drive. It still sounded good, but it wasn't "I just played for 90 minutes without realizing it because of how much fun it is to play a guitar that sounds like this" good. So I took it out today, undid all of my work, and ran it back straight to the jack. When it works, it works.

The guitar has 3 knobs - 2 volume, master tone - and a toggle switch for a battery powered boost where the 4th knob would go on a normal LP layout. I never use the boost and it isn't mounted to the circuit board like all the other controls, so I'm thinking about whether or not I could use that spot for a blower switch with all of the other quick connect stuff intact. I think my other option if I still want a range of control is to pull the entire board, and put in (maybe) a 1Meg volume pot for the bridge, have the neck going through 500k volume and tone pots, and put the pickup selector in as a small 3 position toggle in the 4th hole. That would bypass the run of wire to the switch on the upper bout.

Or maybe I'll just leave it this way. It's got the perfect amount of crunch and pick attack. It's not a very subtle difference. I can make up the high end and gain at the amp and get it sounding fine, but it just doesn't feel as good.

I've had my Explorer set up this way for 16 or 17 years. I only tried it at first (with a BKP Cold Sweat) to bypass a bad pot because I needed the guitar up and running, but it was instantly what I wanted to hear. I've since tried it just to hear how it sounds on my other guitars with varying degrees of success. It doesn't work everywhere. Going straight to the jack has sounded unbalanced, harsh, and brash with all of the Duncan bridge pickups I've used, and in all of my 25.5" scale guitars. On the other hand, it worked great with with a 498T in my Steinberger baritone. The Cold Sweat sounds crunchy and awesome in my old Epiphone LP. The Explorer is currently home to a Rebel Yell which also sounds amazing. And I have to say there's something nice (to me) about just plugging in and having the guitar sound how it sounds. Helps me focus on playing instead of fiddling around with little adjustments.

Anybody else enjoy this with any of their guitars?
 
Yes, I wired a Steve Harris straight to the jack in my P Bass. Sounds epic with the full detail while the bass and everything else in the eq sounds normal.

Are you gonna do a blower switch?
 
amazing, I'm always using vol and tone control a lot, especially for taming the highs , maybe your set is really dark (I currently use a Fender Princeton and an old JCM800), the pickup directly to the jack would be ear piercing in my rig
 
Yes, I wired a Steve Harris straight to the jack in my P Bass. Sounds epic with the full detail while the bass and everything else in the eq sounds normal.

Are you gonna do a blower switch?

It worked really well with the Bartolini bridge soapbar in my 6 string bass, too. More grit and more detail in the high end. I might go back to that. I do use the dual volume setup I have in there but the straight-through hardwired sound was addictive.

I'm thinking my best bet is to pull the whole board and wire it up fresh. That way I can put it all back in if I ever want to go back to stock wiring. Single volume for the bridge, if anything. Should I use a 1Meg pot, or a no-load pot, or just a regular 500k pot but have a blower switch? I have one of my other guitars set up so the neck has tone controls but the switch sends the bridge pickup straight to the jack.
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amazing, I'm always using vol and tone control a lot, especially for taming the highs , maybe your set is really dark (I currently use a Fender Princeton and an old JCM800), the pickup directly to the jack would be ear piercing in my rig

The amp is a VHT Pittbull 100CL. I'm using a VHT speaker cab I got last year, which is darker than my old Peavey Sheffield cab, mostly in a good way. In general, it's not a dark rig. Neither the pickup nor the guitar are bright and zingy, though. For this guitar and pickup, I can tame the extra highs just by rolling back the mid and treble EQ on the amp from a little bit past noon to a little bit before. But I have definitely experienced the harsh, nasty ice-pick high end when I try this with other pickups and other guitars.
 
I use the tone and volume too much to do something like this.

I was the only vocalist as well as guitarist for a couple of bands so for a long time I wanted my entire setup to be as simple as possible. It didn't help that the music was all loud and kind of fast and overcomplicated, either. Anything more than some channel switching was too much for me to think about onstage. Having sounds baked in was one less thing for me to worry about. It's still a mental habit, I guess.
 
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