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Re: Tone control
The tone control on a guitar is a simple first order (6dB per octave)
low pass filter formed by a capacitor in series with a pot - and
those two shunted across the pickup. The corner frequency is
determined by the position of the tone control knob. In some
combination of capacitor value and pickup inductance a resonant
circuit can be formed by the capacitor and pickup (P-90s are
particularly good for this). The result is similar to a 'half
-cocked' wah-wah pedal.
>There has to be some kind of capacitor, though.
>
>t
>On Apr 2, 2010, at 10:18 AM, William Walker wrote:
>
>>Most guitar manufacturers no matter how high end usually don't go
>>the extra mile by including capacitor circuits on the their tone
>>controls. usually something like a.02 micro fared capacitor I seem
>>to recall, but I'll find out for sure. Rolling off Hi end doesn't
>>have to be an all or none proposition. The guy who assembles my
>>electric guitars used to live and work in Austin for people like
>>Stevie Ray Vaughn and David Grissom, and knows all the tricks about
>>wiring. My tone controls attenuate a bit of high frequency without
>>muffling the sound. Playing technique can provide different shades
>>of bright and dark simply by moving closer to the neck and away
>>from the bridge, or using finger flesh rather than a pick, or using
>>a pick out of a more neutral material than plastic. I use dunlop
>>jazz 3 picks when playing with picks though these days i prefer my
>>fingers. The jazz threes are very neutral sounding.
>> As for flat wounds I'm glad there are people out there who like
>>and buy them, but I won't, for me playing on flat wounds is like
>>walking on ice, too slippery to really dig in to, and too rigid to
>>bend. BTW why is it that many trad jazz players don't bend strings
>>much? Seeing as there is a direct line between blues and jazz , is
>>it because the strings of choice are too hard to bend? I tried
>>them for slide guitar thinking that the slickness would be an
>>advantage but I couldn't stand how dull they sounded.
>>PS these where DAddario Chromes. I get a lot of life out of my
>>strings but thats because I'm very diligent about keeping my hands
>>clean before I play, and also wiping the strings down thoroughly
>>when I'm done. I like the feel and sound of round wound strings,
>>and ultimately sound is more important to me than feel.
>>Bill the contrarian
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