Whats the difference between 250K pots and 500K pots?

GuitarGuy503

New member
I just bought a 2001 Fender MIA Body off Ebay and am starting to plan out my guitar project. I have 500K Pots in my 2004 Fender MIA because they were recommended to me but I can honestly admit that I never thought to ask what the difference was between 250k pots and 500k pots. :smack: What's the difference between 250K pots versus 500K Pots? Any info on this would be great. Thanks in advance. :dance:
 
Re: Whats the difference between 250K pots and 500K pots?

Hey GuitarGuy; I'll try not to make this too technical. ;)

A guitar pickup is a small electrical generator, that generates an AC voltage. The volume controls, tone controls, and amp input all present an electrical "load" to that generator. To keep things simple, we'll just consider the volume pot.

Normally, the volume pot presents itself as a resistance across the pickup. The less resistance, the greater the electrical "load". In this case, a load acts as a dampner. A 500k pot is a fairly large resistance, and thus, a light load. The pickup will have a certain tone characteristic. If we lower the resistance to 250k, (cutting it in half), we present a much greater load to the pickup. It will be "damped" more. In terms of the sound, it means slightly less output, slightly less high frequencies.

Depending on the guitar and the pickups, this can be good or bad. So, basically, a 500k pot will allow greater highs, and output than a 250k will. A 1 meg will do more than a 500k. But you reach a point of diminishing returns. If you go too high, you may end up with a pup thats ice-pickey, or harsh.

So, it becomes a matter of selecting the right value for your application. Sometimes you just have to try one or the other to find the right "sweet-spot".

Someone else will probably come along and give a shorter, more direct answer. :rolleyes:

Artie
 
Re: Whats the difference between 250K pots and 500K pots?

the value of the pot indicates the resistance at wide open. the higher the value the brighter the tone. most people use 250k for single coils while using 500k for single coils. there is no right or wrong, just guide lines
 
Re: Whats the difference between 250K pots and 500K pots?

jeremy said:
the value of the pot indicates the resistance at wide open. the higher the value the brighter the tone. most people use 250k for single coils while using 500k for DOUBLE coils. there is no right or wrong, just guide lines

i think this is what he meant to say
 
Re: Whats the difference between 250K pots and 500K pots?

I always thought 250k was for passive pickups and 500k was for active pickups?
 
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