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Mike, I wasn't trying to be mean, but your outright dismissal of my sound clips as irrelevant without any experience of your own in this matter wasn't taken well here :-)
I think it is possibly true that a handmade humbucker may be more sensitive to this cap value switching. Especially this set I make, which is based on actual PAF technology from that era. I make my own magnetic circuit parts and they aren't like anything any of the factory parts makers or factory pickup makers use. These pickups are real touchy about what magnets are in them, whereas if I use the factory parts that everyone here uses, the magnets don't have such a big effect, so maybe these are more prone to a cap value change.
SK's plots at least prove that cap TYPE does change the audio signal, maybe its not easily heard, but put it in the context of someone playing stadium rock with a bank of big ass amps behind them; every tiny thing becomes magnified. I supposed there is such a thing as tone cap snobbery out there, but if there was really nothing to this at all, I don't think there would be a raging business community selling NOS tone caps out there, things and ideas of no substance usually fade away for good.
I'm glad you're going to give this a try, you could also use a frequency analyzer to plot results, you can get free software for a PC that does this stuff, it doesn't have to be perfectly accurate, just repeatable, whatever method you use.
I got those Sprague NOS caps in yesterday and am going to swap them for same value singlecoil.com caps and see if I hear any difference. I don't expect to but remain open minded....
Mike, I wasn't trying to be mean, but your outright dismissal of my sound clips as irrelevant without any experience of your own in this matter wasn't taken well here :-)
I think it is possibly true that a handmade humbucker may be more sensitive to this cap value switching. Especially this set I make, which is based on actual PAF technology from that era. I make my own magnetic circuit parts and they aren't like anything any of the factory parts makers or factory pickup makers use. These pickups are real touchy about what magnets are in them, whereas if I use the factory parts that everyone here uses, the magnets don't have such a big effect, so maybe these are more prone to a cap value change.
SK's plots at least prove that cap TYPE does change the audio signal, maybe its not easily heard, but put it in the context of someone playing stadium rock with a bank of big ass amps behind them; every tiny thing becomes magnified. I supposed there is such a thing as tone cap snobbery out there, but if there was really nothing to this at all, I don't think there would be a raging business community selling NOS tone caps out there, things and ideas of no substance usually fade away for good.
I'm glad you're going to give this a try, you could also use a frequency analyzer to plot results, you can get free software for a PC that does this stuff, it doesn't have to be perfectly accurate, just repeatable, whatever method you use.
I got those Sprague NOS caps in yesterday and am going to swap them for same value singlecoil.com caps and see if I hear any difference. I don't expect to but remain open minded....
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