Bare Knuckle Pickups Forum
Forum Ringside => Tech => Topic started by: Mattiaas on January 26, 2011, 05:34:43 PM
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So, I have a guitar with actives and I want to replace them with passive ones, meaning I will need to ground them to the bridge.
I don't know if there's a pre-wired ground from the bridge but I found a sole wire with a rubber cover(lol) on it(Over the bare wire that is). Could that be the ground wire?
Thx dudes :)
Btw, is the ground wire necessary?
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what guitar is it?
my old ltd had actives but it also had a pre-installed ground wire going to the bridge that was just taped off.
you could see the wire going off into a small hole in the direction of the bridge. not the battery or anywhere else.
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Schecter C-1 Blackjack ATX.
There's 3 holes. One to the jack, one to the battery and one to the pickups.
I couldn't see where it came from(the wires are such a mess).
It was a slighly thicker red wire
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can you post a pic?
were does that red wire go?
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Turns out it was 3 wires(Pickups and battery)....stupid me.
Guess I'll have to drill a hole from the bridge pickup cavity now :/
Still, is the grounding wire absolutely necessary?
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Not something you have to have, but if you'd like less noise then I'd do it. Very few people experience a backwards result, where their body actually picks up hum and noise and transfers it through the strings. You should ground the bridge though. You haven't said whether it's a tremolo or a fixed, but trems are easier IME because you just have to drill through the bridge PUP route to reach the claw where it can be soldered.
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Tune-O-Matic ;)