I bought one of those cheap Chinese Teles, and I've been fixing it up. Among other things, I put new pickups in it, got a blank control plate and arranged the volume forward, the tone rearward and a Gibson-style toggle in between. All good so far.
But, as often happens, I wasn't thrilled with the neck pickup (too quiet, too dark). So I got the idea to change the volume pot to a 500K to get a brighter, louder neck pickup sound. I thought I'd use a 250K resistor to bring the bridge pickup back to 250K. But now I find myself unable to decide where to locate the resistor.
Should I put it between the bridge pickup hot lead and the switch, or should I attach both the pickup lead and the resistor to the switch with the other end of the resistor going to ground? Both seem to work (though I haven't got it strung up for a proper listening test yet). I imagine that if I send the resistor to ground it will affect both pickups when the switch is in the middle position (both pickups on), which may or may not be desirable.
But, as often happens, I wasn't thrilled with the neck pickup (too quiet, too dark). So I got the idea to change the volume pot to a 500K to get a brighter, louder neck pickup sound. I thought I'd use a 250K resistor to bring the bridge pickup back to 250K. But now I find myself unable to decide where to locate the resistor.
Should I put it between the bridge pickup hot lead and the switch, or should I attach both the pickup lead and the resistor to the switch with the other end of the resistor going to ground? Both seem to work (though I haven't got it strung up for a proper listening test yet). I imagine that if I send the resistor to ground it will affect both pickups when the switch is in the middle position (both pickups on), which may or may not be desirable.
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