Last week I had a bit of time on my hands for a small DIY-project, nothing major.
I've noticed that there is quite some noise (hiss/hum/modulation) in my amp when on high gain. After looking into this, it became clear that it's from my guitar and not from anywhere else.
I went the conductive paint route, painting the cavities I could reach on my LTD baritone and my Gibson Voodoo LesPaul. I painted them twice, thoroughly and grounded the body underneath each pickup and in the electronics cavity.
Here are my thoughts on this:
- shielding doesn't really do that much, there's still almost the same amount of noise on both guitars; oddly enough the neck pickups seem to have benefited more from it than the bridge units.
- my ESP already came with this type of shielding. In direct comparison the guitar seems a bit quieter, which I think is probably due to the covered pickups (the other guitars have open coil pickups).
- it seems to be universally recommended that the body is grounded. This doesn't seem to actually do anything as far as I can tell.
- touching metal parts with my hand, especially on the Gibson, is still is audible through the amp (a slight tap/click). The physical contact also slightly reduces noise/hum. Placing a cable between where I touched the guitar (for example the bridge) directly to the ground however doesn't reduce noise. Why is this?
I'm just wondering, shielding doesn't seem to do that much on a humbucker equipped guitar, or am I missing something here? I'm not disappointed, because there is a slight reduction in noise here and there (like I said the neck pickups seem to have benefited), but I had of course hoped for more.