Bare Knuckle Pickups Forum
Forum Ringside => Pickups => Topic started by: sgmypod on February 06, 2007, 08:11:37 PM
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turns out I have a treble bleed on my gordon smith, have just fitted a Mqueen,
1. is it worth removing
2. if so what difference will it make to my sound?
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1) That's up to you
2) It'll sound at 10 like it now does with the tone at 9
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main thing a treble bleed does (far as I can tell) is stop you losing highs as you roll your volume down. it's personal preference, but I like having one- if you roll your guitar's volume down for cleans, things can get very muddy very quickly, especially considering most (maybe some, just to be safe!) people like sparkly cleans.
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Could you remind me what a treble bleed consist in, in terms electric device?
I think I'll need to put one on my LPs.
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Could you remind me what a treble bleed consist in, in terms electric device?
I think I'll need to put one on my LPs.
There are different ways to do it. I put one on mine by soldering a 330pF cap between the centre tag and live tag on the volume pot.
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erm not sure then...first guitar with one
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I have one guitar with, and one guitar without a capacitor on the volume...
I didn't know this when I first bought the guitars, but I always liked the one with capacitor better when I rolled the volume down... it could clean up even the dirtiest of sounds, and give a very dynamic or even funky clean sound, where the other guitar would be quite muddy and not too defined.
I'm now considering putting it in the other guitar aswell.
So well, unless you don't like how your sound cleans up when you back off the volume, I suggest you keep it.
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My Strat has a 220K resistor and a 250 pF cap in parallel.
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I have one guitar with, and one guitar without a capacitor on the volume...
I didn't know this when I first bought the guitars, but I always liked the one with capacitor better when I rolled the volume down... it could clean up even the dirtiest of sounds, and give a very dynamic or even funky clean sound, where the other guitar would be quite muddy and not too defined.
I'm now considering putting it in the other guitar aswell.
So well, unless you don't like how your sound cleans up when you back off the volume, I suggest you keep it.
yeah, that's what I'm going by too... my ibanez has one, and my kramer doesn't.
:drink:
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ta will keep see how I go