Many thanks to Possum for bringing up this topic since I'd been meaning to experiment with some of the premium caps around.
No mythbusting in this thread- just some opinionated and subjective observations.
I ordered some Hovland Musicaps and some Luxe Bumblebee clones over the weekend and the Musicaps arrived today.
I replaced the generic brown .022uF tone cap in my PRS SE Singlecut II (w/ a Burstbucker 2 in the neck and a Burstbucker Pro in the bridge). And gave it a spin in a few of my amps.
My impression was that it was definitely worth the ~$12 since it did open up the middle range of the tone control- lots of good sounds in there that I wasn't getting before in the 14 months that I've had this guitar.
Would it be worth it to spend $24 for two caps for one of my Les Pauls? I'd have to think about that...
As for the custom guitar builders out there, I doubt that you could justify the added expense and many of your customers might not really appreciate the difference (I doubt if you can hear much of anything going through one of those modern multiprocessors! ) But I would suggest offering an upgraded cap or two as an option.
I'll try out the Luxe Bumblebee when I get it and post the results here. And I repeat that these are just very subjective experiments- nothing scientific at all. It is just something that you hear and feel when you are playing. So the next time that you are suffering a G.A.S. attack, don't buy another guitar that you don't need, but spend a small fraction of that on some upgraded caps that you find on eBay or Google and make your own tests. Or not...
Steve Ahola
P.S. The local electronics part dealer just got in some Orange Drop caps! When I asked the previous owner for some Orange Drop caps about 15 years ago, he told me "caps are caps- these are just as good!" So I replaced the tone caps in my BF Pro Reverb with some of those "little greenies" that he sold me and it made the amp sound like crap. I put the original caps back in and it sounded much better (so its not like I screwed something up). While the technical explanations and theories can be interesting, what I really care about is what works for me. And I know from personal experience that all caps were not created equal...
No mythbusting in this thread- just some opinionated and subjective observations.
I ordered some Hovland Musicaps and some Luxe Bumblebee clones over the weekend and the Musicaps arrived today.
I replaced the generic brown .022uF tone cap in my PRS SE Singlecut II (w/ a Burstbucker 2 in the neck and a Burstbucker Pro in the bridge). And gave it a spin in a few of my amps.
My impression was that it was definitely worth the ~$12 since it did open up the middle range of the tone control- lots of good sounds in there that I wasn't getting before in the 14 months that I've had this guitar.
Would it be worth it to spend $24 for two caps for one of my Les Pauls? I'd have to think about that...
As for the custom guitar builders out there, I doubt that you could justify the added expense and many of your customers might not really appreciate the difference (I doubt if you can hear much of anything going through one of those modern multiprocessors! ) But I would suggest offering an upgraded cap or two as an option.
I'll try out the Luxe Bumblebee when I get it and post the results here. And I repeat that these are just very subjective experiments- nothing scientific at all. It is just something that you hear and feel when you are playing. So the next time that you are suffering a G.A.S. attack, don't buy another guitar that you don't need, but spend a small fraction of that on some upgraded caps that you find on eBay or Google and make your own tests. Or not...
Steve Ahola
P.S. The local electronics part dealer just got in some Orange Drop caps! When I asked the previous owner for some Orange Drop caps about 15 years ago, he told me "caps are caps- these are just as good!" So I replaced the tone caps in my BF Pro Reverb with some of those "little greenies" that he sold me and it made the amp sound like crap. I put the original caps back in and it sounded much better (so its not like I screwed something up). While the technical explanations and theories can be interesting, what I really care about is what works for me. And I know from personal experience that all caps were not created equal...
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