Re: Experimental rail pickup construction: wiring question
Posted: Thu Oct 30, 2014 5:41 am
Back to the issue of the mellow / muddy sound:
Did You check how the resistive / capacitive load would effect that, i .e. if increasing the load resistance and lowering the load capacitance would already help? Simple and cheap test: attach one pickup directly to the output jack and/or use shorter cables.
If that will go in the right direction, You might use 1 Meg pots and possibly a "no load pot" for the tone control.
These measures will of course not cure the "muddiness" and slower response caused by eddy currents - and these may be induced in ANY conductor within the magnetic field, including the base plate, and of course the blades (You might need thinner blades, as i did when i turned my Gibson TBPlus into a sidewinder).
It will be a process of trial and error and needs a lot of experience (which i do not have as well).
Did You check how the resistive / capacitive load would effect that, i .e. if increasing the load resistance and lowering the load capacitance would already help? Simple and cheap test: attach one pickup directly to the output jack and/or use shorter cables.
If that will go in the right direction, You might use 1 Meg pots and possibly a "no load pot" for the tone control.
These measures will of course not cure the "muddiness" and slower response caused by eddy currents - and these may be induced in ANY conductor within the magnetic field, including the base plate, and of course the blades (You might need thinner blades, as i did when i turned my Gibson TBPlus into a sidewinder).
It will be a process of trial and error and needs a lot of experience (which i do not have as well).