Chuck, i got the alnico 2 yesterday and tried them. So at this point A5 nor A2 seems to do what i want so tonite i plan to try what you said. I have done this before (with a 220k resistor on a switch) but only to change a pot's value so i could easily switch between them and see whether i like 250k or 500k pot best in a particular guitar. I didn't notice any different however in any way other than the difference the pot value gave. No change that i detected in resonant peak as i turned down or any difference in the bleed cap's affect.
Anyways, i plan to try it because you said it would at least in part keep the resonant peak from changing as i turn down, and thats exactly what i believe bothers me about these. When on 10 i actually like the tone a lot. But regardless of what treble bleed scenario i use and what value(s), as i turn down it seems like the pickup's inherent voice or EQ curve changes drastically. The sparkle in the highs goes away and some really dull sounding mid frequency that kills the attack on the wound strings starts becoming unbearable. In short, it just seems that on 10 it's a completely different pickup than 5 for example. Even turned down just to 8 it's already becoming dull. It's crazy, but it changes so radically that theres no treble left for the bleed cap to pass apparently because no value up to .001 that i have used retains any of the sparkly top as i turn down. The cap no matter the value never passes any treble higher than maybe 1k, if thats even considered treble ! More like hi mids. But thats all that gets passed no matter the cap value. Yet on 10 i get plenty of sparkly top end. Use a 250pf cap and put it on a pot and i can spin it from one end to the other with the guitar on 5 and hear no difference ! 500pf.....maybe a tiny bit.
So i'm totally unsure about how the theory behind this 1 M pot lowered to about 250k via a parallel resistor will keep this from happening, but at this point i'll try anything this simple if theres a chance. I'll let you know if it works. Thanks.
Anyways, i plan to try it because you said it would at least in part keep the resonant peak from changing as i turn down, and thats exactly what i believe bothers me about these. When on 10 i actually like the tone a lot. But regardless of what treble bleed scenario i use and what value(s), as i turn down it seems like the pickup's inherent voice or EQ curve changes drastically. The sparkle in the highs goes away and some really dull sounding mid frequency that kills the attack on the wound strings starts becoming unbearable. In short, it just seems that on 10 it's a completely different pickup than 5 for example. Even turned down just to 8 it's already becoming dull. It's crazy, but it changes so radically that theres no treble left for the bleed cap to pass apparently because no value up to .001 that i have used retains any of the sparkly top as i turn down. The cap no matter the value never passes any treble higher than maybe 1k, if thats even considered treble ! More like hi mids. But thats all that gets passed no matter the cap value. Yet on 10 i get plenty of sparkly top end. Use a 250pf cap and put it on a pot and i can spin it from one end to the other with the guitar on 5 and hear no difference ! 500pf.....maybe a tiny bit.
So i'm totally unsure about how the theory behind this 1 M pot lowered to about 250k via a parallel resistor will keep this from happening, but at this point i'll try anything this simple if theres a chance. I'll let you know if it works. Thanks.
Originally posted by Chuck H
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