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Please check my wiring diagram: DiMarzio Super Switch

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  • #46
    Originally posted by rjb View Post
    Good catch!
    If it still won't get loud enough, it's probably broken. - Steve Conner
    If the thing works, stop fixing it. - Enzo
    We need more chaos in music, in art... I'm here to make it. - Justin Thomas
    MANY things in human experience can be easily differentiated, yet *impossible* to express as a measurement. - Juan Fahey

    Comment


    • #47
      Hey, there's an exception! Hmm, but there are a lot of dead attachments and links and circular references in there. Is this the schematic we need to be looking at?
      Click image for larger version

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      In the discussions, there was disagreement about the switch being used. On/Off/On, On/None/On, On/On/On? Whatever is going on, I can see how that middle tab has the + from one pickup and - from the other, with a ground out the top tab and a hot out the bottom to volume. Is that right?

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      • #48
        I think the take-away from that discussion is that there has been at least one guitar made that used a method of making a 'kind-of' PAF pickup out of two widely spaced single coils. What you and others have done is to take humbuckers and make paralleled single coils. Each wiring scheme results in one or more of each kind of coil arrangement: 2 coils in series (PAF or 'humbucker' style) and 2 coils in parallel (strat-style). How many you need of each kind depends on what you want the instrument to sound like. If you haven't seen this current thread yet, there's some opining here.
        If it still won't get loud enough, it's probably broken. - Steve Conner
        If the thing works, stop fixing it. - Enzo
        We need more chaos in music, in art... I'm here to make it. - Justin Thomas
        MANY things in human experience can be easily differentiated, yet *impossible* to express as a measurement. - Juan Fahey

        Comment


        • #49
          Good points in that discussion about having so many options, but with such subtle differences that you might as well just have a few. And the mention of jumps in volume from one combination to another as a potential annoyance or distraction is appropriate to this discussion: series all the way may not be the way to go.

          Ooo, but I'm going to have to take a look at that Free-way Switch... 6 positions!

          Comment


          • #50
            Originally posted by Richard View Post
            One thing you may want to consider is that in position 2 the unused coil of the bridge pickup is still connected to the output. The other end is not cot connected and this may pick up interference. I would run the jumper to terminal 2 on the lower right pole of the switch tying all 1-4 together so the two ends of the coil are connected in position 4. This effectively removes the coil, I believe this helps reject RF interference.
            I thought that this* might be an issue in custom wiring harnesses and would try to get around it one way or another** but in practice with a well-shielded guitar it never seemed particularly noisier.

            * having the unused coil connected to (+)
            ** as I recall I sometimes had to reverse the 4 leads and flip the magnet to avoid (*)

            Steve Ahola
            The Blue Guitar
            www.blueguitar.org
            Some recordings:
            https://soundcloud.com/sssteeve/sets...e-blue-guitar/
            .

            Comment


            • #51
              Originally posted by Jason Rodgers View Post
              Hey, there's an exception! Hmm, but there are a lot of dead attachments and links and circular references in there. Is this the schematic we need to be looking at?
              [ATTACH=CONFIG]35046[/ATTACH]
              In the discussions, there was disagreement about the switch being used. On/Off/On, On/None/On, On/On/On? Whatever is going on, I can see how that middle tab has the + from one pickup and - from the other, with a ground out the top tab and a hot out the bottom to volume. Is that right?
              I don't know if this is exactly the Dano circuit, but it would work for a neck/both-in-series/bridge harness.
              AFAIK, On/Off/On and On/None/On mean the same thing- that's the kind of switch you'd need.
              One "On" position shunts the neck pickup (leaving the bridge pickup ON) and vicey versey.
              DON'T FEED THE TROLLS!

              Comment


              • #52
                The on/none/on will have no center position.

                I like having lots of pickup options. Some options will sound similar on the bass strings and different on the treble strings, some the other way around. Also I have different shades so even though two sounds sound may be similar and and useful in the same way I can get a slight deviation for a little variety. That and sometimes there's that one note that jumps out a little too much or not enough, sometimes this can be corrected. The downside is it can be difficult to get around all the options.

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                • #53
                  Originally posted by Richard View Post
                  The on/none/on will have no center position.
                  In other words, an on/none/on switch is a 2-position switch- not a 3-position switch.
                  Hey, I learned something. (Obviously, for the Dano circuit, you want a 3-position on/off/on.)
                  https://www.carlingtech.com/basic-circuit-function
                  DON'T FEED THE TROLLS!

                  Comment


                  • #54
                    Originally posted by Jason Rodgers View Post
                    Right, so if that middle position on the 3-way toggle is the simplest (and perhaps oldest) switching arrangement for two humbuckers, and it results in a parallel pair, does anyone even want two humbuckers in series? Does anyone know what that sounds like? Is it worth the wiring acrobatics to make it happen
                    I'll say again: this thread is unearthing some interesting rabbit holes.
                    I replaced the toggle switch in my first LP with a 6 position rotary switch in the late 70's which added the serial linkage of the two humbuckers. It was very loud and muddy, and not that usable for me. But there are many applications with serial linkages that can be very usable like two out-of-phase hb's, two single coil pickups (in or out of phase) or split coils from two hb's.

                    The way to find linkages that work for you is to leave the pickup leads long and run them out of the control compartment one way or another (pull a tone pot on a strat if you have to.) Get some small gauge jumper clips and go to town trying out different combinations. Once you find new linkages that you like then you can look into how to wire them up with a super switch and optionally one or two DPDT push-pull pots. The sky's the limit!

                    And yes, nothing is worse than going to the trouble of wiring up a custom harness only to find that most of the linkages are not usable...

                    Steve Ahola
                    The Blue Guitar
                    www.blueguitar.org
                    Some recordings:
                    https://soundcloud.com/sssteeve/sets...e-blue-guitar/
                    .

                    Comment


                    • #55
                      Originally posted by Steve A. View Post
                      I replaced the toggle switch in my first LP with a 6 position rotary switch in the late 70's which added the serial linkage of the two humbuckers. It was very loud and muddy, and not that usable for me. But there are many applications with serial linkages that can be very usable like two out-of-phase hb's, two single coil pickups (in or out of phase) or split coils from two hb's.

                      The way to find linkages that work for you is to leave the pickup leads long and run them out of the control compartment one way or another (pull a tone pot on a strat if you have to.) Get some small gauge jumper clips and go to town trying out different combinations. Once you find new linkages that you like then you can look into how to wire them up with a super switch and optionally one or two DPDT push-pull pots. The sky's the limit!

                      And yes, nothing is worse than going to the trouble of wiring up a custom harness only to find that most of the linkages are not usable...

                      Steve Ahola
                      Steve,

                      One interesting pickup switching method is to use the 4 position Telecaster switch that adds bridge and neck in series to the traditional choices. This way you can put a push-pull switch tone pot to reverse the phase when two pickups are in either series or parallel. Then use a stacked concentric volume control (500K) wired for independent volume (with the pickup leads going to pot center and outer and the output comes from the other pot outer lug). Varying either pot by about one tenth of a turn creates a tuneable out of phase notch sound. This all fits into a stock Telecaster or G&L Telecaster very nicely with very minimal modifications of the external appearance.

                      Joseph J. Rogowski

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                      • #56
                        Ok, guys, this wiring diagram is soldered up, and today I put strings on the guitar and gave it a spin.

                        First, here is a shot of the pickups being assembled (Mojo parts):
                        Blade coils have 5000 (neck) or 6000 (bridge) turns of 42awg wire, with ceramic magnets. Slug coils have 5000 or 6000 turns of 43awg, with neos.
                        Click image for larger version

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                        The guts, with 500k Bourns volume and tone pots, and the DiMarzio Super Switch (4 pole, 5 position). Notice that the switch is tipped on its side! It was too tall for the slim body, so I bent the switch toggle 90deg and cut a "smiley face" slot for it. It works! To recap, the switch selects 1- Bridge full, 2- Bridge/Neck blades, 3- Bridge/Neck full, 4- Bridge/Neck slugs, and 5- Neck full.
                        Click image for larger version

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                        The guitar. Bookmatched black walnut cap over a one-piece spalted maple body core. Multi-scale 25" to 26" neck.
                        Click image for larger version

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                        • #57
                          Oh, and I suppose you want to know my impressions of their sound!

                          First, I just gave it about a 5 minute test of operation, and the pickups are adjusted all the way down, so further tweaking is necessary. The full humbuckers positions sound good. I don't have a great depth of knowledge when it comes to comparisons with other known products, but I can say that the bridge has a bit of a dryness and sparkle that I like. The neck is warm and full, of course, but retains some of the character of its construction, as heard from the bridge.

                          The reason I went to the lengths I did with this wiring diagram, though, was to isolate the coil types in the 2 and 4 positions. Again, the pickups are not at their optimal heights, but there is a difference in tone. Position 2, bridge and neck blades with ceramic and 42, has a bit of a brittle, mid-y tone. Position 4, bridge and neck slugs with neos and 43, is delightfully articulate, with a roundness and warmth that contrasts with the blades.

                          In the end, though, I'm not sure if the blade vs slug tone is different enough to call this a "standard" diagram that I would return to, but it works and it satisfies my curiosity.

                          Big thanks to all who have contributed here! This process has been fun and something of an education in itself.

                          Comment


                          • #58
                            Originally posted by rjb View Post
                            Originally posted by eschertron View Post
                            AFAIK there is no 'standard' switching arrangement out there that puts single coils in series
                            Does Dano count?
                            Not as old as the Dano but my Sup'rStrat wiring harness from 1997 used a regular strat switch and a push-pull pot to get 10 different linkages including bridge and neck pickups in series and the middle pickup in parallel with the bridge and neck in series. BTW the easiest way to get humcancelling for the bridge/neck linkages was to swap the RWRP middle pickup and the neck pickup.





                            Here is the link to the article explaining it all...

                            http://www.blueguitar.org/new/articl...supr_strat.pdf

                            Steve Ahola

                            P.S. I always gave Paul Reed Smith credit for bringing the concept of humcancelling linkages of split humbucker coils in series and parallel to the general public. What PRS brought to the table was NOT in my "bible"- the 1980 edition of Donald Brosnac's "Guitar Electronics."
                            When Gibson added coil cut switches to some of their LP's the idea of having the middle position humcancelling had evidently never occurred to them.

                            Here is something I drew up in 1997. The top drawing shows a typical Gibson coil cut switch which is not humcancelling in the middle position. The bottom drawing shows one way to make it humcancelling. The middle drawing shows an on-off-on switch wired so that in the up position we have Bill Lawrence's trick of inserting a 0.022uF cap in series with the path to ground which will cancel some of the hum.





                            Click image for larger version

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                            Last edited by Steve A.; 08-21-2015, 05:52 PM.
                            The Blue Guitar
                            www.blueguitar.org
                            Some recordings:
                            https://soundcloud.com/sssteeve/sets...e-blue-guitar/
                            .

                            Comment


                            • #59
                              The guitar looks great! Mounting the switch at an angle is cool and gives it a nice custom look.

                              I wired up an HSS guitar so that I can get the middle pickup in series with either the neck or bridge pickup. Middle and bridge isn't that special but middle and neck in series is awesome. Halfway in between a humbucker and position 2 on a Strat.

                              The volume differences between the different combinations doesn't really bother me. I usually only use single coils for clean and distortion masks the differences well enough for me.

                              Comment


                              • #60
                                Originally posted by Richard View Post
                                The guitar looks great! Mounting the switch at an angle is cool and gives it a nice custom look.

                                I wired up an HSS guitar so that I can get the middle pickup in series with either the neck or bridge pickup. Middle and bridge isn't that special but middle and neck in series is awesome. Halfway in between a humbucker and position 2 on a Strat.

                                The volume differences between the different combinations doesn't really bother me. I usually only use single coils for clean and distortion masks the differences well enough for me.
                                Thanks! And it's cool to hear that series scenario worked for you. I got a First Act strat neck and body from a friend (no hardware- he stripped it to make a 2x4 lap steel) that I'm going to make into a pickup test mule. Putting stuff in various series arrangements is the first thing I'm going to experiment with.

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