ParameterMan
New member
Re: Wiring a guitar so all coil leads are sent outside the guitar
Some thoughts:
You can't reproduce the traditional humbucker sound(series or parallel) by isolating the coils and later electronically summing them. The coils see each other as an inductive load and this causes all sorts of interactions that modify the sound significantly. See the effect the Blackouts preamp has on passive humbuckers. You should be able to get away with G0lden's suggestion as long as the inputs you're driving are high enough impedance(maybe 10M+). The problem with that is:
The pickups also interact heavily with the volume and tone controls(as uOpt pointed out). The load from these components significantly changes the coils' resonant peak. You can easily simulate them by running two 250-500k resistors, one in series with a tone cap, across each pair of coil leads that you're going to record. Doing this with G0lden's idea(where you use both the tapped and full outputs at once) will affect the full humbucker sound somewhat.
Since you'll be basically recording four independent pickups, I think you should use P-Rails. Now that would offer a range of tonal options.
I think you should do it in the name of epic experimentation. I personally think it's an awesome idea but that once you try it, you'll decide simply selecting a pickup the old-fashioned way is good enough. But that shouldn't stop the experiment.
Some thoughts:
You can't reproduce the traditional humbucker sound(series or parallel) by isolating the coils and later electronically summing them. The coils see each other as an inductive load and this causes all sorts of interactions that modify the sound significantly. See the effect the Blackouts preamp has on passive humbuckers. You should be able to get away with G0lden's suggestion as long as the inputs you're driving are high enough impedance(maybe 10M+). The problem with that is:
The pickups also interact heavily with the volume and tone controls(as uOpt pointed out). The load from these components significantly changes the coils' resonant peak. You can easily simulate them by running two 250-500k resistors, one in series with a tone cap, across each pair of coil leads that you're going to record. Doing this with G0lden's idea(where you use both the tapped and full outputs at once) will affect the full humbucker sound somewhat.
Since you'll be basically recording four independent pickups, I think you should use P-Rails. Now that would offer a range of tonal options.
I think you should do it in the name of epic experimentation. I personally think it's an awesome idea but that once you try it, you'll decide simply selecting a pickup the old-fashioned way is good enough. But that shouldn't stop the experiment.