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mediumflats July 27th, 2012, 09:46 AM I am getting my first stratocaster shortly and I would like to wire it in this way:
3-way switch
Front: Neck & Middle
Middle: All 3 pickups
Back: Bridge & Middle
I am both a wiring and a Strat novice. Is this a possible arrangement?
Thanks,
Doug
waparker4 July 27th, 2012, 09:54 AM It would be the same as a stock telecaster wiring with the middle pickup wired straight to the volume pot.
mediumflats July 27th, 2012, 10:22 AM ok, thanks.
Teleterr July 27th, 2012, 10:53 AM Interesting wiring, what kind of music do you play? If you haven't heard N ll B , thats another great tone along the lines of whats you re getting.
mediumflats July 27th, 2012, 03:25 PM I play the blues, as well some new wave stuff. Really simple passages.
I like full tones and I had never heard of a strat wired in such a way that prevented the use of a single pick-up on its own. I thought it would be an intersting limitation. My main interest in Strats is that they are so incredibly comfortable to hold and to play.
waparker4 July 27th, 2012, 03:35 PM It would be cool to add a switch to turn the middle pickup on and off; maybe in place one of those extraneous tone controls. If you like the blues, the neck pickup alone is a pretty classic sound.
garrett July 27th, 2012, 04:03 PM There is such a thing as a three way super switch, which would make that arrangement possible and simple to wire.
I have a guitar with a five way Megaswitch M wired as:
Bridge and middle series
Bridge and middle parallel
Bridge and neck parallel
Neck and middle parallel
Neck and middle series
Something different.
Teleterr July 27th, 2012, 04:16 PM I play the blues, as well some new wave stuff. Really simple passages.
I like full tones and I had never heard of a strat wired in such a way that prevented the use of a single pick-up on its own. I thought it would be an intersting limitation. My main interest in Strats is that they are so incredibly comfortable to hold and to play. "Interesting limitation". I like the approach. Its easy to see too many possibilities and get lost in the vastness. I've done crazy switching w as many as 28 combos. I ended up using only 5 at all, and 3 mostly. I will mention that 2 p/ups in parallel then in series w the third is a great full, yet airy sound. It has both the series and parallel sound and features the non-parallel p/up as its major tonal vibe.
AJBaker July 27th, 2012, 04:20 PM It would be the same as a stock telecaster wiring with the middle pickup wired straight to the volume pot.
Exactly. Weird wiring, let us know how it works for you!
Rob DiStefano July 27th, 2012, 07:05 PM I am getting my first stratocaster shortly and I would like to wire it in this way:
3-way switch
Front: Neck & Middle
Middle: All 3 pickups
Back: Bridge & Middle
I am both a wiring and a Strat novice. Is this a possible arrangement?
Thanks,
Doug
all three pups together is typically a very bleh tone. i recommend a blender circuit for all strats ....
5-way
master volume
master no-load tone w/.022uf cap
no-load neck pup blender (this will allow the bridge/neck and bridge/middle/neck pickup combinations)
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v82/rfdee/wiring/strat-blender2.gif
AJBaker July 27th, 2012, 08:30 PM all three pups together is typically a very bleh tone.
I have to agree. Plus, for me at least, the strat in between sounds are a bit overused. The three sounds you listed are actually some of my least favourite on a seven sound strat.
If you want to try something a bit different, go with what you said, but with the middle pickup wired half out of phase (search phostenix). Great sound, and different!
Teleterr July 27th, 2012, 09:27 PM Yeah all 3 untweaked might not be so great. I do like 3 in series (<6K each) and the 2 and 1 combo I mentioned, so I think all 3 ll might be very nice w the proper EQ, but it is thin and string noise prone without any. AJ has a good idea about the 1/2 out of phase thing that gives a different and quite usefull sound when done w 2 p/ups.From my 28 tone Strat I remember being disapointed about the tone w all 3, but with 1 OoP, the M if I remember correctly, it was a lot better.Since theres 3 p/up the OoP p/up takes the place of the filter cap sort of.You'd need a Super Switch for that.
mediumflats July 27th, 2012, 11:03 PM good advice, thanks everyone. i particularly appreciate the point about the 3-pickup sound not adding up to much. i have never knowingly heard it, so that's good to know.
garrett July 27th, 2012, 11:44 PM good advice, thanks everyone. i particularly appreciate the point about the 3-pickup sound not adding up to much. i have never knowingly heard it, so that's good to know.
I too am not very fond of that option. It has a sort of unfocused sound to my ears.
Teleterr July 28th, 2012, 10:19 AM Its unusual to have a consensus about anything, ie all 3 p/ups on. But its easy to try for yourself just solder all 3 to the volume, since you are a fan of parallel you might hear something w it that the rest of us don't. It is very clear and transparent, my main complaint was it sounded sort of like an unpluged electric played in front of a mike. Too much pick/fingering noise. My recommendation would be get the 3 way Super Switch and do all the 2 p/up parallel combos. N+B is really usefull and is the clearest of the 3 IMO,while still having a lot of character.
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