I see how the no-load pot functions for you here. I actually misunderstood the way it would work. You can use it, but you might get a more piercing bridge PUP sound with the resulting more pronounced resonance peak. It's actually not uncommon to wire over more resistance for a bridge Tele PUP even with 2 x 250k pots in the circuit. How pronounced the peak will be depends on the PUP and the cable capacitance. I'd think about wiring the blend for the combined pos only, and wiring over different resistors for each PUP. If you are set on finding a fixed blend setting for the P/P, consider that the circuit resonant frequency and level goes up as the PUP's are blended, but hardly changes at all with less than, let's say, ~100k resistance in front of the blend PUP. There could easily be a strong upper-mid peak that can create a nice sparkle or brittleness, depending a lot on the bridge PUP and the capacitance load. You may want to wire a resistor over the blend pot.
I figure it's best to have a knob for each PUP position, but combining one for a few positions can work great too. A master tone requires to be adjusted for each position, whereas dedicated knobs could potentially be set for each song. You could even wire up the P/P pot as a HOoP option with a ~2nF cap. A Super Switch would open up some per position options as well, but we are getting complicated.
The dual pot blend is a perfectly good idea. The point is to wire the PUP's as if they are tone caps, so you'll have control over the subtle blend range from 1~7 on the knob. Otherwise, the blend PUP will drop in volume abruptly from 10~7 with not much control over subtleties. I configured a P/P to swap blend PUP's on one blend knob for a Strat type.
I figure it's best to have a knob for each PUP position, but combining one for a few positions can work great too. A master tone requires to be adjusted for each position, whereas dedicated knobs could potentially be set for each song. You could even wire up the P/P pot as a HOoP option with a ~2nF cap. A Super Switch would open up some per position options as well, but we are getting complicated.
The dual pot blend is a perfectly good idea. The point is to wire the PUP's as if they are tone caps, so you'll have control over the subtle blend range from 1~7 on the knob. Otherwise, the blend PUP will drop in volume abruptly from 10~7 with not much control over subtleties. I configured a P/P to swap blend PUP's on one blend knob for a Strat type.
Comment