Ok... guitar techs and electronic friends....
I have a Taylor Acoustic Electric that has the Taylor Expression System (ES II). Just this week, I noticed some crackling coming through my amp. After investigating, I learned the strings are tied to ground via a fuse. There is a bar under the saddle, and the balls of the strings touch that. That bar then goes to a wire which goes through a fuse which then goes to ground. The fuse opened... and that disconnected the ground to the strings.
According to the Taylor Web site - "The fused string ground was developed by Taylor to make the world a safer place for those of us plugging in. Unlike traditional string grounds that connect the string directly to ground on the guitar, Taylor puts a small 10mA fuse in line with that connection. This means that voltage coming up the guitar will blow the fuse and protect the player by disconnecting the strings from ground. This does not cause the electronics in the guitar to shut down, it simply disconnects the strings from being part of the grounding circuit."
https://www.taylorguitars.com/taylor...d-fuse-trimmed
So... really, a fuse? I am not sure why I would have blown a fuse. I have no electrical issues at my house. But really... a fuse?
I know others have asked if it is safe to bypass the fuse... since this ground path does not tie to the preamp... but I cannot seem to find a legit response. Yes, I am trolling the guitar blogs but those guys have no idea.
Anyone?
Thanks, Tom
I have a Taylor Acoustic Electric that has the Taylor Expression System (ES II). Just this week, I noticed some crackling coming through my amp. After investigating, I learned the strings are tied to ground via a fuse. There is a bar under the saddle, and the balls of the strings touch that. That bar then goes to a wire which goes through a fuse which then goes to ground. The fuse opened... and that disconnected the ground to the strings.
According to the Taylor Web site - "The fused string ground was developed by Taylor to make the world a safer place for those of us plugging in. Unlike traditional string grounds that connect the string directly to ground on the guitar, Taylor puts a small 10mA fuse in line with that connection. This means that voltage coming up the guitar will blow the fuse and protect the player by disconnecting the strings from ground. This does not cause the electronics in the guitar to shut down, it simply disconnects the strings from being part of the grounding circuit."
https://www.taylorguitars.com/taylor...d-fuse-trimmed
So... really, a fuse? I am not sure why I would have blown a fuse. I have no electrical issues at my house. But really... a fuse?
I know others have asked if it is safe to bypass the fuse... since this ground path does not tie to the preamp... but I cannot seem to find a legit response. Yes, I am trolling the guitar blogs but those guys have no idea.
Anyone?
Thanks, Tom
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