Originally posted by Steve Conner
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new gibson ccontrol cavity circuit board CRAP
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It would be possible to describe everything scientifically, but it would make no sense; it would be without meaning, as if you described a Beethoven symphony as a variation of wave pressure. — Albert Einstein
http://coneyislandguitars.com
www.soundcloud.com/davidravenmoon
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Originally posted by Steve Conner View PostUnless maybe they're telling you to spend 20 bucks on a capacitor, then it's time for a sanity check from science. Maybe those magic caps from EBay sound so unique because they're out of tolerance, high ESR and leaky, and $1 worth of caps and resistors would give you the same tone, but it would be reliable.
Well that is a pretty big exception, capacitors that is. Are not capacitors in a guitar tone circuit really the only significant point of contention as far as listening versus science? Nobody is saying that capacitors do not sound different under some circumstances, just: in a guitar, tone pot on ten, prove your point.
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Originally posted by Steve Conner View PostEmpirical data and listening results complement each other, and we should strive to understand the relationships between them. I believe that work you do here has a huge payoff. It can be as simple as running stuff through an EQ to get a feel for what boosts and cuts at different frequencies sound like. Instead of just being "too boomy" now you can say your prototype has about 8dB too much energy at 120Hz, and that gives you a correlation with the physics.
It is also a matter of resources, insofar as we're talking about posters here. I'd LOVE to have great recordings of every single pickup I've wound, I'd LOVE to run all of the tests, collect all the data, etc. etc... but money is money. I make pickups in my free time to keep myself sane when repair work runs dry. I think many others on here are the same.
Great medical correlation. Perhaps I am strangely lashing out at some doctors I've dealt with who didn't use their basic senses and ordered up big tests instead. Anyone who can't handle simple deduction without million dollar machines and technicians to read the results to them missed their calling as a doctor. See what you did Steve? You got me all wound up....
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Mojotone Capacitor Shootout - My Les Paul Forums
Here's a good example .all clips sound good ..The only comment came from GBLEV
But as i was reading got the impression this member did not want to start a sh_t storm & he replied in the conservative way. to not get attacked
& there is always an inconclusive test ...........not testing properly
Dam I think they all sound good ......But maybe that's not my best interest
I just pulled the trigger on a couple hundred Russian PIO caps just to sell along with my pickups"UP here in the Canada we shoot things we don't understand"
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Originally posted by copperheadroads View PostMojotone Capacitor Shootout - My Les Paul Forums
Here's a good example .all clips sound good ..The only comment came from GBLEV
But as i was reading got the impression this member did not want to start a sh_t storm & he replied in the conservative way. to not get attacked
& there is always an inconclusive test ...........not testing properly
Dam I think they all sound good ......But maybe that's not my best interest
I just pulled the trigger on a couple hundred Russian PIO caps just to sell along with my pickups
Playing on zero is not what guitarists tend to do, but it is where you are most sensitive to the effect of the capacitor. As you turn the pot up, there is less total current through that branch of the circuit, making it less important, and the voltage across the resistor goes up and the voltage across the capacitor down, making its characteristics less important.
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Originally posted by Mike Sulzer View Post...Nobody is saying that capacitors do not sound different under some circumstances, just: in a guitar, tone pot on ten, prove your point.
(and David S recenty too which surprised me)
Posting there is no documentable/observable difference between one cap and another in a guitar tone control circuit, totaly dismissing the end user's ear (and judgment). Have I been totally mis-reading your posts Mike?
(don't think so)
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Originally posted by copperheadroads View Post...But maybe that's not my best interest I just pulled the trigger on a couple hundred Russian PIO caps just to sell along with my pickups...
Going one step further (since some people can hear the difference) one might consider providing an additional a greenie/OD/M-150 then the customer could find the cap that suits their own rig and preference.
I tend to ask my customers a series of questions when they order my pickups, including the tone and resonance of their particular instrument, bright/mid/dark, and the type and setup of their playing rig (effects in particular, amp, speakers and cabs) so say if a guy has a highly bright sounding instrument (Tele) and plays with a Rangemaster into a Vox AC30, well that guy can use a PIO cap and be real happy, but a guy with a dark sounding mid 70's Norlin (pancake) Les Paul that plays with a triangle Big Muff Pi into a 70's Marshall Super Bass, well he's gonna be needing a cap that isn't like the PIO, brighter more linear cap.
Makes sense to me, if you sell or provide caps, might as well have those that are currently in demand (for whatever reason).
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Originally posted by RedHouse View PostWell actually you have been saying that.
(and David S recenty too which surprised me)
Posting there is no documentable/observable difference between one cap and another in a guitar tone control circuit, totaly dismissing the end user's ear (and judgment). Have I been totally mis-reading your posts Mike?
(don't think so)
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Originally posted by RedHouse View Post...totaly dismissing the end user's ear (and judgment).
On the differences when the tone control was in the off position, or close to it, might have been due to each cap having a difference value, while still being in its acceptable tolerance range.
To really do this test well, the caps must be measured and matched first. Then the person doing the switching must not be the person doing the playing, who shouldn't know which cap is which. In that YouTube "test", the type of cap was prominently shown as he played each one. This lead to comments about what a certain cap sounded like, probably based on the listener's expectations, while I heard nothing different through my Sennheiser HD 515 headphones.
Comments like the low end is less muddy with a certain cap, when the tone control is on 10, make no sense at all.
So a lot of it is psychology. If you think about what the cap is doing in the tone control circuit, how would a different type of cap make any difference? If it's cutting more top end, then its value is different.
If a test is done listing the audio samples as A, though E, for example, and then had listeners pick which was which, how many do you think people would get right? I bet almost none, with the correct answers being by chance.Last edited by David Schwab; 11-08-2011, 02:53 AM.It would be possible to describe everything scientifically, but it would make no sense; it would be without meaning, as if you described a Beethoven symphony as a variation of wave pressure. — Albert Einstein
http://coneyislandguitars.com
www.soundcloud.com/davidravenmoon
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Originally posted by David Schwab View PostBrad, using my ear, I hear no difference between cap types with the control on 10. ...
Not everyone is a Buz Feiten (I sure am not) but as I've been saying here (as have others) that I experience a difference in tone caps, and I prefer some over others in my guitars, as do a healthy share (but not all) of my customers. Many have tried to desrcibe what they perceive when discussing cap differences (not values) but in the end, something was perceived regardless.
It's all good, and sound preference/enjoyment/perception doesn't have to be an acedemic argument all the time.
{Edit} oh and it's not on 10 that I'm talking about, it's thoughout the range of the pot travel. On zero difference is most distinguishable, on ten the least, but it's the in-between that myself and most folks find the differences get into the like/dislike area. You have to work the control when you play, different notes, different fretboard locations, then you find a cap implies differences on the instruments function.
Psycology? no, psycoacoustics? more likely.Last edited by RedHouse; 11-07-2011, 10:56 PM.
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Originally posted by RedHouse View PostI tend to ask my customers a series of questions when they order my pickups, including the tone and resonance of their particular instrument, bright/mid/dark, and the type and setup of their playing rig (effects in particular, amp, speakers and cabs) so say if a guy has a highly bright sounding instrument (Tele) and plays with a Rangemaster into a Vox AC30, well that guy can use a PIO cap and be real happy, but a guy with a dark sounding mid 70's Norlin (pancake) Les Paul that plays with a triangle Big Muff Pi into a 70's Marshall Super Bass, well he's gonna be needing a cap that isn't like the PIO, brighter more linear cap.
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