A local vintage guitar dealer came by to pick up the bridge I rewound for him from a '66 Hofner bass. He surprised me with a couple other guitars to talk about their pickups a bit (triple P90 setup). One was a '49 Gibson ES-5 and the other a '53 Gibson ES-5. They have one master tone and a volume pot for each of the 3 P90's. He thought they were suffering from low output. I measured the magnet strength compared to some other P90's in the shop and they all seemed OK. Also seemed OK when I put them both head to head against a Casino I have on the test guitar rack. Again, volume levels very comparable.
Here is where the volume thing got a little weird. So the bridge volume pot turns clockwise to increase volume when the middle pickup volume pot is dialed back. But when you dial up the tone pot for the middle pickup, the tone volume for the bridge pickup operates in the opposite direction (e.g. 1 is full volume; 10 is no sound, so sound level increases as you move from 10 - 1 and decreases as you turn from 1 - 10). Again, that reverses when you dial back the middle pickup volume pot. He didn't have time to mess around with it any further as his wife was patiently waiting in the car.
Anyone experienced this "change in direction" wiring setup before on one of these?
Just curious. . .
Here is where the volume thing got a little weird. So the bridge volume pot turns clockwise to increase volume when the middle pickup volume pot is dialed back. But when you dial up the tone pot for the middle pickup, the tone volume for the bridge pickup operates in the opposite direction (e.g. 1 is full volume; 10 is no sound, so sound level increases as you move from 10 - 1 and decreases as you turn from 1 - 10). Again, that reverses when you dial back the middle pickup volume pot. He didn't have time to mess around with it any further as his wife was patiently waiting in the car.
Anyone experienced this "change in direction" wiring setup before on one of these?
Just curious. . .
Comment