T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
126.1 | Maybe??? | COLORS::BUSENBARK | | Mon Dec 15 1986 10:30 | 12 |
|
Why? aren't the pickup's to far away from each other to cancel
any hum? A single pole double throw switch with one side to the pickup and
the other to the volume pot will give you the capabilities of selecting the
combinations of your other two pickups mixed with the second or middle pick-
up. If hum is a problem maybe an extra dummy coil could be added if anyone
can come up with the inductance of a single coil strat pickup.
Hope this helps
Rick
|
126.2 | hmmmm | FROST::SIMON | Mister Diddy Wah Diddy? | Mon Dec 15 1986 11:21 | 15 |
|
I've got a book that goes has a lot on wiring strats. I'll
take a look tonight to see if it covers this. I seem to
remember something about wiring them in humbucking mode.
I put Bill Lawrence pickups on my strat (Ibanez). They are
actually humbucking pickups. They have the same footprint
as the single coil pickup because the two coils are stacked
one atop the other. I've found this to give it a very clean
sound but still produces the single coil sound.
-gary
|
126.3 | Easy | COLORS::SAVAGE | | Mon Dec 15 1986 15:03 | 6 |
| You can do this by wiring in a switch to put these 2 pickups in
series. You may also want to be able to reverse the phase on one
of them for another sound. I did this once and it was cute but it
doesn't sound like a normal humbucking.
-Dennis
|
126.4 | Lawrence pickups for Strat | PISCES::KELLYJ | | Mon Dec 15 1986 16:27 | 19 |
| I have a '73 Strat that exhibited horrible buzz whenever we played
at one particular club in Southbridge, Mass. I put a single Bill
Lawrence stacked humbucker...looks like a single coil...in the neck
position one Friday before we played and the improvement was so
amazing I replaced the other two pickups Saturday morning. Absolutely
no hum!
To be perfectly honest, the guitar lost a little of that characteristic
Fender 'bite' with the humbuckers, but the slight change in tone
was worth the playability. Incidentally, I have a 5-position switch
installed, so I can get those out-of-phase sounds using positions
2 and 4.
Try it...you'll like it!
Regards,
Johnny Jupiter
|
126.5 | Can't do that from here, but... | INK::MWHITE | | Wed Dec 17 1986 09:32 | 12 |
| You can try what .3 recommended; it will give you a thicker sound
similar to a humbucker, but there's *NO* way to wire the treble and
the midrange pickup on a strat to *act* like a true humbucker....
you'd have to have them both in the same flux field and one coil
would have to be negative to cancel the hum. A stacked pickup is
your best bet if hum is a prob.
Personally, I like the DiMarzio HS-3 for a cleaner stacked pickup
and the Seymour Duncan Dual Blade for a really hot `humbucker-that's-
single-coil-sized'.
-WJB
|
126.6 | hum's not a problem | CSSE::CLARK | every day I have the blues | Wed Dec 17 1986 14:30 | 3 |
| I'm not really concerned about hum per se. I just would like to
have that fat humbucking sound if I want it (mind you, I don't
always want it!).
|
126.7 | While were at it how about this? | COLORS::BUSENBARK | | Fri Dec 19 1986 11:26 | 18 |
|
I have a technical and experiance question concerning two different
guitars. For those of you who have played or owned both a Gibson Les Paul and
a Fender Strat is it possible to get the fat gibson sound out of a strat? Is
it equally possible to get a strat sound out of a les paul? I realize that
usually Gibson players don't play fender and visaversa,but I would like to
hear opinions of how someone has made there instrument versatile for both
sounds. I have also heard that part of the sound of a Les Paul is created
from the interaction or resonances of the maple top of a Les Paul and it's
mahogony body. If you put Les Paul electronics in a Fender Strat could you
get the "fat" sound,with alot of sustain or would it have a sound similiar
to a telecaster with humbuckers?
Lets hear it!
|
126.8 | Easy to do... | COLORS::SAVAGE | | Fri Dec 19 1986 14:37 | 15 |
| The construction of the guitar and the wood play a very important
part in the sound of the instrument.
You can, however, put a humbucking pu in a strat and get a very
gibson sound. Usually a bit more of the highs will show through
than on a Paul. One can also put a strat style pu on a gibson and
get very close to the fender sound. You will have to do some cutting
to the wood on the strat to get a humbucking pu in there but it
wont hurt anything and you can always go back later. Buy a pickguard
that is set for a humbucker and put it on the strat. Don't tear
up your original pickup assy. Very easy to put a strat pu on a gibson.
Same hole widths but different screw size. 6-32 for the strat and
2-56 for the paul.
Dennis
|
126.9 | EQ-it | INK::BUCKLEY | | Mon Dec 22 1986 09:28 | 4 |
| Also, `severe' (?) EQing with a graphic or a parametric will make
a strat sound like a les paul and vice versa.
wjb
|
126.10 | Foolproof method | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Mon Dec 22 1986 10:55 | 6 |
| re: .7
To make a strat (or any other guitar for that matter) sound like a
Les Paul, run it through a Scholz Rockman.
db
|
126.11 | Sorry, but no way | COLORS::SAVAGE | | Mon Dec 22 1986 15:57 | 6 |
| RE: .10
Not to be touchy but that won't work at all. A strat still sounds
like a strat no matter what you put it through.
Dennis
|
126.12 | Strats aren't "immune" to sound processing | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Mon Dec 22 1986 17:36 | 14 |
| re: .11
> Not to be touchy but that won't work at all. A strat still sounds
> like a strat no matter what you put it through.
Even if I run it through a Pitch-rider MIDI interface? Of course
not.
I don't mean to sound like a know-it-all but I get the impression that
you may not have used a Rockman. They are extraordinarily good
at their intended purpose: making anything sound like a Les
Paul/Marshall combination.
db
|
126.13 | | BAXTA::BOTTOM_DAVID | | Tue Dec 23 1986 09:22 | 7 |
| re: -1
Sorry but I disagree...I own one and rock modules, they do not make
my strat sound like a les paul, or my lead one, or my whashburn
or my tele.....each guitar sounds like itself running through something
that boston would use
dave
|
126.14 | What if? | MOSAIC::BUSENBARK | | Tue Dec 23 1986 09:44 | 6 |
|
I've been meaning to try a Rockman,but I wish there was a simpler way
of getting this effect without a lot of signal processing gear which just adds
noise. And my neighbor's wouldn't be to happy with a stack of Marshalls.
Maybe it's worth getting a imitation strat and retrofit it with Dimarzio and/or
Lawerence pickups. Has anyone done this and been satified with the results?
|
126.15 | Never used one? | COLORS::SAVAGE | | Tue Dec 23 1986 11:47 | 20 |
| RE: .12
I have owned a Rockman for a long time. I got one of the original
nine of them from Wurlitzers and also have an X-100. I think I know
what a Rockman sounds like. It is not a convert_everything_to_les_paul
box.
RE: .13
Exactly.
RE: .14
I put a DiMarzio PAF in a strat and used it for a long time. I also
used a DiMarzio Super Distortion for quite awhile. I was very pleased
with these set-ups, though I did eventually go back to a more strat
style pickup assembly (EMG). If a humbucking PU is what you want
go ahead and put one in. You can always take it out later.
Dennis
|
126.16 | String habit.... | BAXTA::BOTTOM_DAVID | | Tue Dec 23 1986 12:44 | 15 |
| I think this underlines the need for more than one guitar......no
one guitar will do everything. I love my strat for it's biting sounds,
it plays blues like nobodies business, but it doesn't rock out all
that well.....for that I own my lead 1......(it's a fender, looks
and feels like a strat but came with one humbucking pickup, I added
a semour duncan hot stack by the neck, if any guitar I own comes
close to "one guitar for all sounds" this is it, the humbucker split
coils ie: allows you to get a single coil sound although it's very
hot. These are discontinued...don't know how many were made or how
difficult they will be to find but its a good inexpensive guitar)
For metal sounds I use my washburn, for blues and softer stuff I
have my tele custom......and of course then I also have some acoustics
for the real layed back stuff.....
dave who_wants_only_ten_to_fifty_more_guitars_:-)
|
126.17 | Damn your ears | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Wed Dec 24 1986 09:17 | 8 |
| Are you telling me that you could pass a blindfold test where I
run a strat and several different guitars through a Rockman set on
the "Heavy Boston" mode (the highest level of distortion) and always
pick out the strat?
If so, I'd be impressed. I know I couldn't.
db
|
126.18 | | BAXTA::BOTTOM_DAVID | | Wed Dec 24 1986 09:59 | 12 |
| Yes I believe I could, it's no problem as the strat has so much
more high end and is so much thinner sounding...just like a strat.
I was talking to SR&D the other day complaining that my replacement
rockmodule has signmificantly less gain in the pre compressor stage
than the original and they said, oh they weren't designed to run with
strats, just like the rockman they were designed for humbucking
pickups......but send it in anyway and we'll check it out......
dave
|
126.19 | | PABLO::DUBE | | Mon Dec 29 1986 12:47 | 11 |
| Re: .17 and .18
The keyboard player in my band plugged his DX-9 into my Rockman
on the heaviest distortion mode and I couldn't tell the difference
between the keys playing one chord and my Les Paul playing one chord.
Everything that goes through the Rockman in that mode is remarkably
similar.
However, there is a *slight* difference when I use my Ibanez Roadstar
(a strat-style guitar) - a little thinner sounding.
|
126.20 | Clarification | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Mon Dec 29 1986 16:13 | 12 |
| I guess I should add that my comments are based mainly on the heavy
distortion mode. In the cleaner modes the differences between guitars
(and keyboards) do come through as they would on any amp.
In heavy distortion mode though, everything sounds the same to my
ears. The point is that is NOT generally true for amps.
Even with both preamps cranked up high on my Boogie, although I may not be
able to correctly IDENTIFY what kind of guitar it is, I can definitely
hear the differences between guitars (although the amp itself only has
a few distinctive lead sounds with any one input).
db
|
126.21 | strat rewire | USRCV1::MCNALLT | | Tue Dec 30 1986 20:35 | 13 |
| Yes there is a real neat way to rewire the strat pickups in humbucking
mode. The way its done is to remove one of the tone controls which
you never use anyway and replace it with a two position rotary switch
which will enable you to switch from parallel to series (humbucking)
anytime you are using more than one pickup.
I hve the schematic for this modification which I got from Dan
Armstrong; who designed the "Orange Squeezer", "Purple Peeker" etc.
My name is Tom McNall and my DTN is 252-7001, call now for your
free copy!!!
|
126.22 | Is this a phase switch? | CAM1::ZNAMIEROWSKI | These go to 11... | Thu Jan 01 1987 03:13 | 16 |
|
RE: .21
Question:
Is this the same as a phase switch? I have an Ibanez RS135
with a phase switch which seems to (on certain switches) beef up
the sound, thickness wise. It sounds as if it takes the bass poles
on the pickup(s) and uses them instead of the treble poles. For
example, if I have the main switch on the 3rd position I get a thin,
Jaguar sound, but when I flip the phase toggle, I get a warmer,
*very* Knopfler-y tone. I would imagine this isn't the same thing,
but for the sake of my sanity, could someone explain what the bloody
hell a phase does? Thank you very much.
regards
|
126.23 | One new/old strat | MINDER::KENT | | Thu Jan 01 1987 14:18 | 34 |
|
I am not sure if this is the right topic to help with this problem
but it is Strat related so here goes.
I just took delivery (thanks to Santa) of a circa 77 Strat. It is
sunburst with a black scratch plate and black pickups all maple
neck (If thats what the blonde single colour necks are made of?)
and the truss rod sticks out of the headstock about an inch in a
bullet shape. It also has what I assume is the original termolo
(whammy?) arm fitted.
1 Has any body come across this age of Strat before and what are
your views?
2 Are the Black pickups the originals?
3 I never had a guitar with a Whammy before, and on this one severe
use causes it to lose tune slightly. Is this because of the design
of the Bar or the way it is set up. I don't use it a great deal
so I would not be prepared to change it for one of the other ones
I would probably disconnect it. I seem to remember something about
Graphite marking (with a pencil) the runners to stop the strings
sticking. Has anybody tried this and how do I do it on this model?
4 How do the tone control work on a STRAT. On mine they only seem
to affect the neck and middle pickup is this Normal?
Sorry if this is a lot of questions but it's better asking you guys
who are impartial then the guy who sold it me.
Thanks in advance.
Paul.
|
126.24 | Help, Doctor Whammy! | CAM1::ZNAMIEROWSKI | These go to 11... | Thu Jan 01 1987 19:02 | 9 |
| Re: Da Whammi.
Of course it's gonna go out of tune; you're stretching the strings.
Once the the strings are stretched sufficiently, it shouldn't go
out, so when you put new strings on, you beat the hell out of them,
so they don't stretch anymore.
Hope this will help.
regards
|
126.25 | strat abuse | INK::BUCKLEY | | Thu Jan 01 1987 22:08 | 17 |
| Re .23:
First, the whammy. Yes, to a certain degree, the guitar will not
hold tune until the strings are fully stretched, but there are other
characteristics of the old Fender vibrato's worth mentioning. Often
the strings will catch in the nut slot when returning to pitch...
graphite lubrication applied to the nut slots helps alleviate the
problem to a certain degree. There are also a few tricks that can
be done with the springs to help retain pitch (I forget details
but a guitar tech might be able to help).
RE tone controls. You're right, there are only two tone controls
on a strat, for the neck and middle pickups respectively. There
is no tone control for the treble (bridge) pikup, however, there
are several ways to rewire a strat if that's the route you want
to take.
-wjb
|
126.26 | two-posn rotary switch | CGFSV1::EDMENG | | Wed Mar 30 1988 15:35 | 32 |
| Re: .21
I had a local guitar technician install a two-posn rotary switch
in place of the middle pickup tone control. The volume control is
now a master volume, the first tone control is a master tone, and
the second tone control is now a rotary switch (with the original
tone knob on it).
If the rotary switch is in "posn 1", the five-way toggle switch
will select the usual combination of pickups. If the rotary switch
is in "posn 2" the five-way toggle switch selects the pickups as
follows:
posn 1) lead (bridge) pickup only
2) neck and middle pickups in series
3) neck and lead pickups in series
4) all three pickups in series
5) lead and middle pickups in series
With the pickups in series they are wired like a humbucker (but
the coils are farther apart) and they do produce a "fatter" sound.
The guy who installed the rotary switch said it is used in the Fender
Lead series guitars, but ask around.
I also installed EMG's new hi-Z signature pickups in all three
positions (no preamp or battery needed)
I really like my setup because:
1) the EMG pickups are virtually noise free and still have
that cutting strat sound
2) it does not change the looks of the guitar - I could
restore it to stock if I wanted to, and most impt,
3) the extra pickup combinations give me more fat sounds
for lead work, and I still have the original strat sounds
-bs
|
126.27 | oops! | CGFSV1::EDMENG | | Wed Mar 30 1988 15:53 | 6 |
|
re: .26
I meant to say EMG's SELECT pickups, not EMG's signature pickups.
-bs
|
126.28 | The Strat | MARKER::BUCKLEY | Rocker Built for Speed! | Wed Mar 30 1988 15:56 | 5 |
|
Yeah, I remember that wiring design...Fender offered such in its
the Strat model guitar.
hows it sound clean n dirty?
|
126.29 | hi-lo | RICKS::CALCAGNI | | Wed Mar 30 1988 20:49 | 4 |
| I thought the EMG selects were LOW impedance. Anyone want to take
a stab at why you would want one and not the other?
/rick
|
126.30 | hi-z/lo-z diff | CGFSV1::EDMENG | | Tue Apr 05 1988 19:59 | 37 |
|
Re .29
EMG SELECTS are definately hi-z. See notes 31.28 - 31.30 for more
info.
As far as I know, this is how the hi-z/lo-z thing works. Lo-z pickups
deliver a very clean (no hum) low amplitude signal. Lo-z signals
can travel over a very long lo-z cable with little signal loss because
the "hot" and ground wires are balanced electrically and both are
shielded (like a lo-z mike cable). If you had a guitar equipped
with lo-z pickups, lo-z output jack, a lo-z cable (mike cable),
and your guitar amp had lo-z inputs, you would be laughing. Les
Paul experimented with this and I think this configuration used
to be used on the "Les Paul Recording Model" guitar. Very quiet
I would think.
However, most guitars are equipped with hi-z output jacks, most
guitar amps are designed to accept hi-z signals and have hi-z inputs,
and your standard guitar cable is hi-z (unbalanced).
Hi-z pickups generate a larger amplitude signal (usually more noise
if single coil) but as the hi-z cable gets longer, more signal is
lost. Lo-z pickups with preamp (and battery) also ultimately generate
a large amplitude signal (with less noise if a single coil) but
again some of the signal is lost because most guitar/amp setups
use hi-z cables.
I was mainly concerned with hum when the pickups were full throttle,
and I did not want to install lo-z pickups with preamp etc. Seymour
Duncans were too expensive. the EMG SELECTS were the cheapest and
quietest hi-z pickups I could find.
-bs
|
126.32 | STRAT'S JUST THE WAY THIN'S IS!!!! | HAMER::KRON | | Wed Feb 01 1989 14:15 | 10 |
| last months git-R player had an update on that rotary switch
thing.I don't own a guitar at present but have toyed with the
idea of wiring a bass like that;just to be obnoxious.I did see a
sammy strat that some yo-yo in the local store dropped and split
the body at the control cavity,and they want 79 clams for it,
the crack's not all the way thru and I'm just crazy enough to go
for it,so I hope y'all wish me luck!
Bill K---bass player,psychotic-still wanting a git!
|
126.33 | desperate!! | POLAR::KFICZERE | | Wed May 24 1995 11:01 | 7 |
| I'm having some prob's with a strat that i'm putting together.It is
correctly wired (by Fender specs) and still continues to have an
obnoxious hum.I'm sure it's ground related but cannot figure it
out.When plugged in it buzz's, when i touch any metal part of it, it
snaps and quites down a little.Any help greatly appreciated.
-kev
|
126.34 | Try This... | BSS::MESSAGE | My name is Bill & I'm a head case... | Wed May 24 1995 12:36 | 16 |
| Sounds like the bridge ground wire is not completing the path to the
ground on the outside case of one of the potentiometers. There's a hole
drilled at an angle from the control cavity to the bridge cavity. Look
in here, and GENTLY tug on the wire that runs through the hole to the
bridge (if there is one present). If either there is no wire, or the
wire pulls out from one end or the other, you've discovered your
problem. Solder either (or both, if the wire was missing) end to the
location it once was soldered, and you're done.
Also, there's a chance that some other part of the ground path is
incomplete; trace all wires and shields leading to or from the
potentiometer cases, and maybe you'll see a poor solder joint or some
other problem.
Regards,
Bill Message
|
126.35 | BzzzzSNAP!!bzzzzzzz | POLAR::KFICZERE | | Wed May 24 1995 12:48 | 9 |
| Thanks Bill.I wish you were right on this one,but as i said, it is
defenitly wired to specs.I've checked all the wireing throughout,and it
seems fine.I'm just about to re-wire the whole thing.It's driving me
nuts!!
Is it posible for a pot to have a bad ground internally?? And speaking
of pots,my vol. pot says 500k on it. Some one told me that all Fender
pots are 250.Any takers??
-kev
|
126.36 | | MLOBU1::BROOKS | Phasers don't kill, people kill | Wed May 24 1995 19:55 | 15 |
| I know nothing about Fender pots, and very little about most E-guitar
electronics.
My Yamaha SE700HE has 2 humbucking pickups with a coil tap.
In single coil mode there is a reasonable amount of hum. Especially
if I'm near a TV or flourescent/neon light. Humbucking mode is very
clean. If I touch the strings or bridge, the hum subsides somewhat.
My body must provide some extra grounding. It has been like this since
day one, so I doubt that anything is wrong.
Depending on the severity of the hum, I'd say it's the nature of the
(single coil) beast. I haven't played many real Strats, but the ones
I did play all hummmmmed.
Larry
|
126.37 | | POLAR::KFICZERE | | Thu May 25 1995 06:29 | 5 |
| Thanks for the input Larry. I t always did hum a little (very
little),but now it's Buzz's like a freakin' chain-saw.I just don't
know.
-kev (who is tearing his hair out over this)
|
126.38 | | WMOIS::MAZURKA | Son_Of_One_Who_Likes_To_Ramble. | Thu May 25 1995 06:44 | 6 |
| Awwww,Whadda ya Worryin About,-kev.
That Buzz will sound good on those 3_Chord OffSpring songs yer Doing.
Crazy_Bzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz_Al
|
126.39 | BzzzzSnapbzzzzzsnapbzzzzz... | POLAR::KFICZERE | | Thu May 25 1995 07:42 | 5 |
| Thhanks for reminding me Al.But on a brighter note,my singer quit the
band last nite and i won't have to play those anoying 3 chord Offsping
tunes no more....now to find another singer,with no 'tude!
-kev
|
126.40 | | MPGS::MARKEY | The bottom end of Liquid Sanctuary | Thu May 25 1995 10:33 | 13 |
|
Kev,
Sounds to me like you have a ground loop. Ground loops are badly
named... what it really means is that you have two (or more) grounds,
and there is some DC offset voltage between them.
The solution to the problem is to resolder all the grounds,
preferably to one point. If you're relying on the sheilding
as a ground (in other words, to connect two ground contacts)
don't...
-b
|
126.41 | | POLAR::KFICZERE | | Thu May 25 1995 11:49 | 4 |
| Thanks -b, i'll take another look and see what i can do with it.Ground
loop 'eh? Hmmmmm...i'll defenitly check for it.
-kev
|
126.42 | Call Fender | NOTAPC::HARPER | | Tue Jun 06 1995 08:57 | 8 |
| If you haven't fixed your hum prob, call Fender. They have a 1-800
number and will put an engineer on the phone to talk to you. I got
great help wiring Lace sensors into my Telle and they sent me the
schematics for all the variations of wiring.(U.S.,Mexican, and Japan)
and three and five pos sellect switches. I got the number out of this
notes file somewhere.
Mark
|
126.43 | | POLAR::KFICZERE | | Wed Jun 07 1995 09:55 | 6 |
| WOW! Thanks Mark. I think i copied that number down somewhere a while
back. That's a good idea. I'm going to see a buddy of mine with a
multi-meter (and a brain) toniteto see if we can find the problem. If
not...."Hello? is this FENDER?"
-kev
|