T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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516.1 | Already Stereo | FSTVAX::GALLO | | Thu Mar 03 1988 07:08 | 10 |
|
The 4001 is *already* a Stereo Bass.One of the jacks is
a mono (front and rear combined) and the other jack is stereo.
I'm not sure whether its the same stereo plug as say,a pair
of headphones would use,or some special arrangement.
Ricks were always one of my favorites,good luck!
/tomg
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516.2 | Ah Ha ... | NCVAX1::DICKS | The Bird is the Word | Thu Mar 03 1988 13:20 | 16 |
|
This Bass has had a lot of surgery performed on it, so I'll have
to try and trace the circuitry. (I knew there was a draw back to
being a software type guy).
I assume when you mean 'Stereo' I must use a Stereo style Phone
plug and big the signals out at the amp end for separate plugs.
I take possession this Saturday, so I'll check inside and see what's
what.
I also own a Kramer 8 String which I might want to re-wire. Has
anybody done anything like that?
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516.3 | Hot Setup | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | | Fri Mar 04 1988 08:28 | 13 |
|
Re wiring guitars is simple. Of course, some experience in wiring
electrical things is helpful, as there are certain "ways" of treating
the wiring style considering that it's high impedance...
Your idea to run two cords is excellent. Someday, you may even
pickup another amp and have a completely Bi-amped system. This is
the Hot setup, Billy Sheehan of DLR band does that and I know that
the BIG GK bass amps are actually two in one. I also know the Peavey
1810 and 1820 speakers can be driven with two amplifiers. That's
enough evidence for me!
Joe Jas
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516.4 | wiring advice | ERLANG::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Fri Mar 04 1988 13:00 | 8 |
| Speaking of internal wiring, is there any special kind of wire that
should be used for passive circuits? That is, shielded, copper,
solid core, gauge, etc. I know some of the electrics I've taken
apart, mainly older ones, use very heavy gauge solid core wire with
a braided shield (tied to ground). Is there a reason for this, or
will any good quality wire do?
- Ram
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516.5 | Wired | BARTLS::MOLLER | Vegetation: A way of life | Fri Mar 04 1988 13:38 | 23 |
| You should always use sheilded wiring in audio circuits. The type
of wire really isn't that important, since the wiring inside the
guitar is short. You'll find that some guitars have copper sheilded
cavities (such as where the pickups & controls are, and some don't.
I shield as much as possible, however, there are points where you
have reached 'GOOD ENOUGH'. If you go to Radio Shack & get their
cheap '20 feet of single conductor' audio cable, this should be
fine for re-wiring.
When I build guitars, I router out sections of wood in 3/4 in pieces
of hardwood, place light-weight copper tubing in it & glue the parts
together. This way I can make sure the sheilding is where it's needed,
no matter what type of pickups that I use. It looks a little strange
on the inside (like you might find a sink & toilet inder the next
cover), but, my guitars don't appear to be very suseptable to noise
from things like radio towers, or neon lights/flouresent bulbs,
etc. It's nearly impossible to improve the sheilding once the guitar
body has been built, short of the easy access cavities.
Some people over emphasize this. Just use sheilded cable on all
connections over 3 inches long, and you should be ok.
Jens
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516.6 | | RANGLY::BOTTOM_DAVID | Maine Wilderness King o' da bluz | Mon Mar 07 1988 07:44 | 6 |
| Also youmay want to try single point grounding to avoid ground loops
and hum..ie: every ground connection inside the guitar has a seperate
wire that runs to the ground on the jackplate, as suggested by my
new book on customising guitars...
dave
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516.7 | Look in broken recievers | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | Turning down to Zero | Tue Mar 08 1988 10:21 | 8 |
|
Regarding the suggestions made here, one place to find shielded
wire is within a broken Orient built tape deck or reciever. Rather
than throwing one of these out, they will usually yield enough wire
to do a couple of guitars...
Joe Jas
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