Hello,
I'm trying to replicate, with a Nordstrand MM pickup, the different wirings from some Music Man basses, with "parallel", "single" and "series" combinations.
I know very well the tone/volume variations when switching guitar humbuckers from series to parallel, but I'm little confused here: passing from the (standard MM) parallel to series wiring gives a huge level increase, impossible to use without reset the volume pot to about half volume (to "5" in my case as I'm using 250k linear pots). At this point, maybe due to the pot resistance introduced (about 125k) the series tone is very similar to the parallel: only the very high end is a little more dull, but the "body" is not much different from parallel.
I remember some years ago I made a series/parallel test with a common split P-bass pickup and I was unimpressed (parallel = less volume and no more) and I kept in that case the original wiring untouched.
So, my question is: did you have the same experiences?
More: searching the net I've found incomplete (non-factory) schematics from MM Sterling and discovered that what they call "series" wiring is not a passive one: the coils are separatley buffered and mixed, so it is more a "buffered parallel", in opposite to the real, passive parallel wiring (as used in the original Stingray model).
Any observation welcome, thanks
m.p.
I'm trying to replicate, with a Nordstrand MM pickup, the different wirings from some Music Man basses, with "parallel", "single" and "series" combinations.
I know very well the tone/volume variations when switching guitar humbuckers from series to parallel, but I'm little confused here: passing from the (standard MM) parallel to series wiring gives a huge level increase, impossible to use without reset the volume pot to about half volume (to "5" in my case as I'm using 250k linear pots). At this point, maybe due to the pot resistance introduced (about 125k) the series tone is very similar to the parallel: only the very high end is a little more dull, but the "body" is not much different from parallel.
I remember some years ago I made a series/parallel test with a common split P-bass pickup and I was unimpressed (parallel = less volume and no more) and I kept in that case the original wiring untouched.
So, my question is: did you have the same experiences?
More: searching the net I've found incomplete (non-factory) schematics from MM Sterling and discovered that what they call "series" wiring is not a passive one: the coils are separatley buffered and mixed, so it is more a "buffered parallel", in opposite to the real, passive parallel wiring (as used in the original Stingray model).
Any observation welcome, thanks
m.p.
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