This is a fashion of last years.
I understand that the only difference between "modern" and "old" wiring is the "routing" point to tone pot and capacitor: in the modern the signal is tapped from the "input" lug on the volume pot, in the '50 wiring the signal is tapped from the "output" lug. I read fantastic notes on the web about this: the guitar don't have treble loss when you roll off the volume, the tone is better...
I think that:
1 - with all maxed the difference is non existant
2 - with the tone even slightly rolled off all you obtain is to have a dramatic interaction with volume setting (you need to change the tone every time you make a volume correction)
3 - with tone maxed maybe the treble loss due to lowering the volume pot is a little less evident, but there are better ways (es: RC "treble bleed" networks) to compensate this without devastate the tone pot response.
The technical reasons are so simple that I can't believe "expert" on the web are writing pages about it. Sometimes I suspect they write but never tried that in person.
Or maybe I'm completely wrong and missing something, please correct me in case.
Thanks
m.
I understand that the only difference between "modern" and "old" wiring is the "routing" point to tone pot and capacitor: in the modern the signal is tapped from the "input" lug on the volume pot, in the '50 wiring the signal is tapped from the "output" lug. I read fantastic notes on the web about this: the guitar don't have treble loss when you roll off the volume, the tone is better...
I think that:
1 - with all maxed the difference is non existant
2 - with the tone even slightly rolled off all you obtain is to have a dramatic interaction with volume setting (you need to change the tone every time you make a volume correction)
3 - with tone maxed maybe the treble loss due to lowering the volume pot is a little less evident, but there are better ways (es: RC "treble bleed" networks) to compensate this without devastate the tone pot response.
The technical reasons are so simple that I can't believe "expert" on the web are writing pages about it. Sometimes I suspect they write but never tried that in person.
Or maybe I'm completely wrong and missing something, please correct me in case.
Thanks
m.
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