The only thing is that you can't use the pickups full potential. I’ve found both values are good, but if you really want the true feeling that a P-90 can deliver, along with a more open single coil tone that won’t A popular way to get rid of some highs in your tone is to solder a 500k ohm resistor on your 500k ohm pot to effectively turn it into a 250k pot. Learn how to choose the right pot for your hot rail guitar. patr. 99% of hot/humbucking single-sized pickups were made with 250k pots in mind, knowing they'd go into Strats. ) I've been playing Seymour Duncan Quarter Pounder pickups in my strat for a Discover key factors when selecting 250k and 500k pots—ideal for guitar mods, audio circuits, and DIY electronics. If this pot is going to be used to spit my neck pick up, and is the Tone position, Re: Hot Rails or Dimarzio HS-3??? will it work good with a 500k pot??? or is it better with a 250K?? The single-500k pickups are a tiny bit louder with the smallest fraction more treble, but you only notice the difference if you use both guitars directly side-by-side. With a 500k pot your pickup would be louder and more powerful with better tone to it. This guide will help you understand the different types of pots and how they affect your tone. The number (250K or 500K) refers to the resistance of the pot, which affects how much high-end frequencies pass through your circuit. Re: New Pot for Hot-Rails? I have to disagree just because if your other two pickups are stock Fender single coils they might sound to bright with 500K pots. No doubt there are exceptions. For humbucker pickups and P90 pickups, we recommend 500K audio taper pots. The bridge is ok but the neck is very bassy. Was thinking maybe I should just try a 500k pot in the neck tone control to give it some more top end? The Seymour Duncan website states you For you guys running hot rails or cool rails in a strat, are you using 500k pots? Or 250k? Would 250k make them sound too muddy, or be okay in a bright guitar? Thanks. 0:00 250k clean1:13 500k clean2:47 250k dirty4:08 500k dirtySupport me @:https://www. Generally with A Hot Rails will work and sound good with either 250K or 500K volume, but "normal" single coils tend to be painfully bright with 500K pots IMO. It wouldn't be overly bright with 500k and would probably suit your taste of full. anyway I recently installed 3 new pickups the Cool Rails (n), Vintage Rails (m) and Hot Rails (b) form Seymour HSS Configuration 1 Vol 1 Tone 5 Way switch Humbuckers need 500k pots and Singles need 250k pots I'm thinking here How can you do this with the differnt types of pickups or is it even 500k & 250k Volume Pots ComparisonStratocaster basswood body, maple neckDOD 250 "Grey Specs"Vol Seymour Duncan Yngwie Speed 500kMarshall 1987XG12 65 Speaker@ Hello all, I am looking to install a Push/Pull pot in the Tone knob closer to the jack on my stratocaster guitar. Re: What pots to use? I was contemplating something similar with an HSS/Ghost setup (except the singles would be "stacked" humbuckers) and I was going with a triple concentric pot Hey all! I have to change the pots (tone pots) on my strat (coz they broke up ). All the Hot Stack bar Do hot rails need 500K pots? No, you don’t need to switch out your 250K pots using Seymour Duncan Hot Rails. A If you mean 59 neck and Hot Rails bridge, that will be pretty fat. I’ve used the hot bridge P-Rail with both 250k and 500k pots. The Hot Rails lacked treble in Re: Switching between 250k and 500k Pots with P-Rails I did something similar to this with my own P-rails, except I did it on the tone circuits. Tested with various Stratocaster (Modified) Guitar single coil The rule I follow with 250k & 500k pots for HSS and HSH Know Your Gear 31K subscribers Subscribe Comparing a Seymour Duncan Jazz neck pickup with 250k and 500k pots. For standard single coil pickups, like those on Stratocaster or Telecaster electric guitars, we recommend Subscribed 211 15K views 1 year ago LE ROURET 500k & 250k Volume Pots Comparison Stratocaster basswood body, maple neck DOD 250 "Grey Specs"more Don't worry about that. Compare types, specs, and value. Get yourself a DPDT pot, a 500K resistor and Testing to see if I can hear the difference between 250KΩ and 500KΩ volume potentiometers. However 250k would knock it down a bit more Conventional wisdom says that single-coil pickups should always use 250k pots for tone and volume (except for P90s. I would only switch to a 500K volume pot if I put a pair of Hot Rails in a guitar (it already had a standard bridge humbucker) and used a 250K push-pull pot to split the Hot Rails (there was a 500K pot and a miniswitch to split the humbucker). You’ll notice a fatter, less treble sound than So let's see whether swapping out the 250k volume pot for a 500k pot will make a sonic difference. These are humbucker, not single coil pickups. The bass was recorded direct through a Line6 Pod Go with my usual GK800RB model settings.
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