If there is no bright cap, or it is small then there may be no brightening at all. Some would argue that the 'perfect' bright cap is one that gives the aural impression of no change in brightness as the vol is rolled down. Others may argue that some brightness is good, as it helps the (now quieter) guitar cut through. Even others may want to make the brightness so that the quieter guitar resembles the sound of a strummy acoustic, all 'pick and string noise' and almost no resonance.
I don't have any hard data at hand, but I'd bet a cold one that there are guitar models that have selectable bright caps for the tweakiest of users.
edit: but to speak to your specifics; I imagine that a HB-equipped guitar that is none to bright to start with would need a big honkin' bright cap to have a noticable effect when rolling down. Maybe 2-3 times what's in there now as a bright cap. Often the caps inside a guitar are small enough to not have much info printed on them. If you can get a wiring diagram from the manufacturer for your model SG then maybe you can post what the value is now. Oh, and move this discussion to a new thread
I don't have any hard data at hand, but I'd bet a cold one that there are guitar models that have selectable bright caps for the tweakiest of users.
edit: but to speak to your specifics; I imagine that a HB-equipped guitar that is none to bright to start with would need a big honkin' bright cap to have a noticable effect when rolling down. Maybe 2-3 times what's in there now as a bright cap. Often the caps inside a guitar are small enough to not have much info printed on them. If you can get a wiring diagram from the manufacturer for your model SG then maybe you can post what the value is now. Oh, and move this discussion to a new thread
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