I have a Robin Savoy and I'm changing the pickups. This is a semi hollow guitar with the selector switch in the les paul position, one volume, one tone, and push pull pots for splitting the coils on the two Rio Grande humbuckers. There is a control cavity accessible from the back like a Les Paul, but the shape of the cavity is more like a tele (for obvious reasons). The pickups are way too hot for me and I don't like splitting humbuckers, so I'm pretty much changing out all the wiring and pots.
My tentative plan:
The wires from the humbuckers come into the control cavity. The pickup's ground wire will go straight to my common ground node. The signal wires will go into multi conductor shielded cable which will go to the selector switch and return in the same cable. So will a 3 conductor cable be the best way to do this? My understanding is that the shield will be grounded only at the common ground node. Pots will not have any terminals soldered to the case so that I can more easily switch between 50s wiring and modern, or any other change I might want to make.
I'm also wondering about the capacitance of the shielded cable. This feels like a stupid question, but will using a multi conductor end up with less capacitance than using single conductor for all connections? My thinking is that it might be like using a longer guitar cord. The longer the shielded wire, the more capacitance, is that right? So when using single conductor, it will be three times the length of cable when mixing both pickups. To make it simple, say the distance from the control cavity to the switch is one foot. The neck humbucker needs one foot of cable to get to the switch, the bridge bucker another foot, and the return signal to the jack another foot. BUT, then I thought that it might not matter. Maybe all that matters is the distance each signal wire travels inside the shield. I know someone here must know the answer to this one.
Any feedback on how to best wire this up would be greatly appreciated.
My tentative plan:
The wires from the humbuckers come into the control cavity. The pickup's ground wire will go straight to my common ground node. The signal wires will go into multi conductor shielded cable which will go to the selector switch and return in the same cable. So will a 3 conductor cable be the best way to do this? My understanding is that the shield will be grounded only at the common ground node. Pots will not have any terminals soldered to the case so that I can more easily switch between 50s wiring and modern, or any other change I might want to make.
I'm also wondering about the capacitance of the shielded cable. This feels like a stupid question, but will using a multi conductor end up with less capacitance than using single conductor for all connections? My thinking is that it might be like using a longer guitar cord. The longer the shielded wire, the more capacitance, is that right? So when using single conductor, it will be three times the length of cable when mixing both pickups. To make it simple, say the distance from the control cavity to the switch is one foot. The neck humbucker needs one foot of cable to get to the switch, the bridge bucker another foot, and the return signal to the jack another foot. BUT, then I thought that it might not matter. Maybe all that matters is the distance each signal wire travels inside the shield. I know someone here must know the answer to this one.
Any feedback on how to best wire this up would be greatly appreciated.
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