Originally posted by daz
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Rolling off volume for clean tones....LP issue
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Originally posted by daz View Post
You seem to be saying you read my post as suggesting it's bright and thin when the volume is rolled down? Because thats the exact opposite of what i was trying to describe.
Originally posted by daz View Postit's far brighter and more cutting with the volume rolled off.
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Originally posted by Chuck H View Post
Well removing the tone control almost doubles the amplitude of the resonant peak. Further, the resonant peak on a humbucker will be some thousands of Hz lower in frequency than a typical single coil. Add the treble bleed with no parallel resistor and then the fact that you have to turn down A LOT because humbucker have a much higher output and of course it's going to be shrill and bright when turned down.
The mid cut reduces mids. The humbucker sounds wooly when turned down because the tone is all low mids (sans treble bleed). I still don't suggest the parallel resistor with the treble bleed because it fouls up the pot taper and then you'd have to turn down to something like .75 to get clean and your sweet spot would only comprise a half digit of knob rotation. It's pretty awful.
Since you already have the knobs on the guitar you could always install a mid cut separate from the volume control and adjust them independently. It's more knob fidling but it'll get you there. Trust me, I've done it.
And kudos to you BTW for having the nerve to rewire your LP with a single volume arrangement. I've always hated the four knob wiring on LP's. But then,... That's the classic tone too so that get's lost when you change things.
EDIT: To give you some idea of what you're dealing with, the resonant peak of the stock circuit is about 6dB at around 3kH. With the tone control disabled, a treble bleed of 500p and the volume rolled off half way the resonant peak climbs to 18dB. That's a four fold increase in top end. Not four times more, but four fold. A HUGE amount more top end.
I think the mid cut would meet your needs.
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Originally posted by daz View PostI just want it to clean up better. Not expecting a single coil sound, but it just seems odd to me that with a treble bleed and no tone controls it's far brighter and more cutting with the volume rolled off.
The mid cut reduces mids. The humbucker sounds wooly when turned down because the tone is all low mids (sans treble bleed). I still don't suggest the parallel resistor with the treble bleed because it fouls up the pot taper and then you'd have to turn down to something like .75 to get clean and your sweet spot would only comprise a half digit of knob rotation. It's pretty awful.
Since you already have the knobs on the guitar you could always install a mid cut separate from the volume control and adjust them independently. It's more knob fidling but it'll get you there. Trust me, I've done it.
And kudos to you BTW for having the nerve to rewire your LP with a single volume arrangement. I've always hated the four knob wiring on LP's. But then,... That's the classic tone too so that get's lost when you change things.
EDIT: To give you some idea of what you're dealing with, the resonant peak of the stock circuit with the volume on 10 is about 6dB at around 3kH using an 18' cable. With the tone control disabled, a treble bleed of 500p and the volume rolled off half way the treble peak climbs to 18dB. That's a four fold increase in top end. Not four times more, but four fold. A HUGE amount more top end.
I think the mid cut would meet your needs.Last edited by Chuck H; 11-27-2023, 01:21 PM.
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300k audio pots for volume and tone and 50s wiring works great for my humbucker LP.
Whereas my P90 LP Pro Deluxe is too trebly with 50s wiring.
For 50s wiring to be of any benefit, the tone needs rolling down a bit. Which might imply setting the amp s bit brighter
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I just want it to clean up better. Not expecting a single coil sound, but it just seems odd to me that with a treble bleed and no tone controls it's far brighter and more cutting with the volume on 10 than when i lower it usually a bleed does the opposite.Last edited by daz; 11-27-2023, 06:43 AM.
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Once you get your ears around single coils humbuckers (with the volume rolled down) always seem to sound like you describe. At least to me. And clearly you too. And I'm a humbucker guy. But my main guitar is a Warmoth strat with a JB Junior in the bridge. So I just switch to the single coils when I roll off the volume.
Not sure what kind of panacea you're looking for. Some kind of humbucker that sounds like a single coil only when the volume is rolled down? But that isn't happening. The LP guys all swear by the "50's wiring". That get's you back to two volume controls and tone controls and A LOT more knob fiddling. Blech. Here's an idea...
Use a dual gang pot for the volume control and wire the second gang as a mid cut circuit. Now when you roll down the volume you'll also be cutting mids. The typical mid cut circuit is all over the place here and elsewhere but I could find and post it if you're not sure what I'm talking about. You probably wouldn't want the full mid cut effect so you could use a resistor in series with that circuits ground to dial in the amount of cut you want at your sweet spot on the volume control.
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Rolling off volume for clean tones....LP issue
This is how i do it, old school. Amp set for classic rock degree of overdrive and volume gets quite clean on 5. I'm a lifetime fender guy who's got a LP wraptail special that does this as well as my fenders but i just got a LP standard and haven't had one of these since the 80s. All my guitars are single coil except this new LP. Heres my problem.....when i roll down the volume it never sounds very clean till about 2 and at that point it's becoming too weak and unusable. At 3 it's usable but much dirtier then my other guitars at 5. It just gets kind dull and lifeless that low. I'm looking for the answer, but please note i DO have decades of experience modding guitars so the usual reasoning's are ones i have tried. I expect there is no answer because i've done it all, but I'm posting this out of desperation in hopes theres something i haven't thought of. It may just be the way humbuckes and maple capped mahogany set neck are and nothing i can do about it. In any case, heres what i have tried...
Pickups are A2 PAF output. Tried putting A5 in them
tried a new set of mojotone 59 unpotted clones
tried every imaginable pickup adjustment both height and screw poles.
Works worlds better when i split them but i want humbucker tone for this, not single coil
tried removing the covers
installed faber steel bushings in the body for the bridge and aluminum stop bar, putting stop bar bushing in tomorrow. Studs are steel. These things help by making it more clear but issue persists tho not as bad
installed treble bleed and tried 250, 500 and 1000pf. No resistor or it would just get more dull and muddiy.
tone controls are not hooked up
tail is screwed down all the way and i have also tried it up to relieve break angle.
installed bone nut
tried several quality pots and insured the taper was not different then usual by comparing middle position to input lug resistance and also insure pot tolerance wasn't way low. Current volume pot is top end CTS 497k (guitar wired like fender, IE: one overall volume pot)
Thats all i can recall but i probably did more. Anyways, it just seems like the signal gets reduced as i roll it down pretty much like other guitars, but while it may not seem to make sense, the clarity never happens and the sound stays dirtier sounding than it should, just very compress and rather dull. I don't know if this is a electronic thing of the wood/hardware, but i've done eveything i can think of as electronics go and in HSS strats that i used for years i never had this happen with even hot humbuckers. Any ideas?
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