Re: Volume Pot 250K or 500K?
Gibson used 500K pots in all of the 50's & 60's Les Pauls, ES-335, SG's, etc.
http://www.doctorvintage.com/electrics/gib_electricals.html
I have two guitars with similar humbucking pickups.
One has a 300K volume pot and 500K tone pot.
The other has a 500K volume pot and 500K tone pot.
The guitar with the 500K volume pot and 500K tone pot is both higher in output (louder) and has more highs. The guitar with the 300K volume pot is both lower in output (quieter) and has less treble than the other.
Even when the guitar's volume control and tone control are on "10", some of the pickup's output signal and treble will leak through it and escape the audio path. More signal will leak through a 250K or 300K pot then will leak through a 500K pot because the 500K has more resistance and resists the signal from leaking through it.
If your pots are higher in value, 500K for example, they will have more resistance and resist the pickup's output from leaking through the pot and escaping the audio path and going back into the planet earth (ground). Instead, more signal will go into your amplifier and be produced as music.
See?
Generally speaking, very bright pickups like Strat and Tele single coils sound "better" with 250K pots as some of the treble bleeds through the 250K pots even when they are "10" and never makes it to your amp. The result is a warmer tone.
And generally speaking, warmer pickups like most paf style humbuckers and modern hot humbuckers sound "better" with 500K pots as very little of the treble bleeds through the 500K pots when they are on "10". The result is that treble is retained and not lost, which is "good" because humbuckers don't have much treble compared to single coils.
But some players, who for whatever reason prefer to throw away the little bit of edge to the treble that a humbucker has, prefer using 250K pots with humbuckers.
I don't.
Lew