Originally posted by guitician
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Dead sounding guitar- help to tone
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Originally posted by Guitarist View PostThanks for the insights. It sounds OK when plugged in especially now that I found better settings and upgrade some Elna Silmic II, 1uF caps in a couple old DOD pedals and lifted some highs-shunting ceramic caps. I'll try and post a sound sample after sorting another issue...
Also, I get more amp hum when I partly turn down the volume pot for some reason. The Carvin power transformer radiates like crazy which may be the problem.
And I can't imagine how a specific amp transformer should be responsible INSTEAD of the guitar unless it's causing the same problems with your other guitars.
The question was raised as to just what "dead sounding" means. Does the guitar sound dead acoustically (unplugged)? Is it just a dark sounding guitar or is there a lack of sustain also? What are we trying to help you with?
Using an FR comes with some compromise. If you want the FR then you need to accept and/or compensate for the fact that all the string vibration is amalgamated through a huge mass of metal on a spring load before getting into the wood via two little knife edges. You mentioned that this guitar has a maple fingerboard. Maples resonance isn't all that. Maybe try an ebony fingerboard? It'll cost you a neck, but it might be just what this guitar needs. Some cost for the experiment could be recovered by reselling the neck you don't use perhaps.Last edited by Chuck H; 07-18-2015, 03:54 PM."Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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It should get a new set of strings and I aught to really recheck the wiring. The reshaped 24 fret maple neck (Washburn) isn't the best grade to begin with and was like $25 from eBay I'm comparing it to two other fine axes (rosewood and thick ebony fretboards) and it is only a few years old. The others are 25. It doesn't sustain terribly badly. I was leery of the alder but it may be settling in yet.
As Chuck says, the Floyd doesn't help even though it one of the world's finest varieties. The Bournes pot is 230K and the tone pot—which I never use—is 1 Meg. Thanks for the uF values, good to have!
I'll check the volume pot issue with the other guitars...but don't worry about it guys, there isn't much more that can be done.
BTW Aside: I threaded a mic stand into a welded nut/plate (vs the weighted base) power-glued onto the board. If it holds up then the setup is easier. The lightweight, stereo cab also has permanent mics. It's a lot of design and rework come into focus.
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Originally posted by Guitarist View PostHi,
I made a custom axe: RG shape, with Edge/Floyd w. copper block, lacquer sprayed sides and back, nitro on top (for looks in iced-tea burst), one single coil and one HB, maple neck (not the greatest), poplar body.
It is now 3 years old and isn't sounding any better compared to my other, albeit amazing, few electrics. So just wondering if some lengthwise drilling in the body may be in order to liven it up. Another idea, might be to mount a transducer/shaker to it and hum it out in hopes to awaken it. I was almost desperate enough to install active pickups but they don't come low output/vintage-toned just high-gain units.
any thoughts/successes?
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