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orgmorg

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Posts posted by orgmorg

  1. I brought the tube amp and a guitar to my friend's store and plugged them in there.

    It still did it, but I had to listen hard for it.

    My friend heard it too, but it didn't sound unusual to him.

    Definitely does it worse here, but maybe a lot of it is just in my head.

    No fixing that, I fear.

    Screw it, I'm gonna go make some cookies.

  2. This is starting to drive me nuts.

    I've had a Fender Yale Reverb amp (solid state) for a while now and it mostly sounds fine when playing at moderate volume, but whenever I dig in a bit on the strings or turn it up, it makes this annoying crackling noise. Not normal distortion, but a static-ey crackling.

    I always just assumed it was the amp, so I recently got an AXL AT-30 (chinese made tube amp,) and it does the exact same thing, exactly.

    Tried different guitars, cables, power conditioner, turning off all fluorescent lights and computers, no joy.

    Do I have some sort of evil power gremlins or something?

  3. OK, so nearly three years later...

    It's time to figure out what to make.

    Hmm..Whadda we got so far? Hard maple neck blank.

    Ummm.. Telecaster?

    Maybe a Bass?

    Corvu... *ack*

    Well, let's see what else we can find, first.

    Need something else that has been drying for a while, so let's head down the road a bit and see what we come upon.

    Ahh... Here we go! Everyone up to date on their tetanus shots?

    barn.jpg

  4. Wes, that's actually eastern red cedar you have in Texas, and maybe some western juniper, which is closely related.

    We have lots of it in Tennessee, and it can get fairly large, but most of it is small scraggly stuff.

    But ya, Spanish cedar is nothing like any of the other woods we call "cedar"

    Never been a fan of this headstock joint.

    I admire the skill it takes to make it correctly, but it seems overly complicated, with no real advantage over simpler methods.

  5. Sorry to revive an old thread, but... I need to buy a couple of 2-Way rods and I'm not sure which to get. I was going to go with the Allied Lutherie ones but the ones on the Grizzly site seems to be very nice. They have the Gotoh and the black, made in China one.

    For an electric guitar, which would be best? The black one seems like a great deal @ $9.95 but its hard to see what they really look like from the pic on the website.

    http://www.grizzly.com/products/Truss-Rod-2-Way/H6031

    Should I go the safe route and stay with the Allied Lutherie ones?

    The gotoh style rods Grizzly carries are 15 and 16" long, a bit short for an electric neck.

    I have used the other ones and they are great, but require a bit of extra routing around the collar at the adjuster end, and for the barrel around the nut.

    These work by way of a "captive nut" system, where when you tighten the nut, it works the same way as a one way double rod, but whwn you back the nut off past its neutral position, it starts pushing against the rim of the barrel it is contained in and bows the rods the other way.

    The allied rods are the best I have ever used. The nut fits in the same slot as the rod- no extra routing/chiseling. Plus, They work differently than other similar double action rods. Instead of using reverse threading on one end, they use fine threads on one end, and coarse on the other. This makes the action much smoother, more precise, and easier to turn, requiring more turns to achieve the same bow as the other rods.

    The welds are also much more nicely done than others, especially the LMII ones, which are notoriously sloppy.

  6. Awesome month!

    I went with Stereordinary's entry, because the design and color just really come together so well.

    Close seconds were Junkyard dog, Staggolee and Scattervarius, but I couldn't quite get over my prejudice against violin shaped guitars. This is the best example I have seen though, partly because of the headstock (and I love the kitty.) Stagolee looks fantastic, excellent work on the finish, but something about the neck bugs me, and the bridge looks a bit too crusty for my taste ( and that is saying something :D ) But I totally understand about finding a piece of "junk" that inspires that kind of excitement.

  7. I vote when I want, for who I want regardless of location, luthier, or thread count

    As it should be :D

    It is supposed to be fun, but we take our fun seriously, I guess.

    I see it primarily as an opportunity for the folks who hang out here and help each other build their chops to show off what they learned.

    I think this is a fairly common feeling, so it is understandable that some will get upset about random entrants just showing up and posting to the contest.

    But so what? maybe some of them will end up sticking around and contributing. You never know.

  8. I'm all about alternative woods.

    Maple, poplar and walnut are about the only "mainstream" woods I use.

    If it grows around here, I am not afraid to put a saw in it and see what happens.

    I have used Eastern red cedar, butternut, sassafras, cucumbertree, sweetgum, hickory, cherry, elm, chestnut, persimmon, locust, beech, osage orange, honeylocust, and Kentucky coffetree.

    How do they sound?

    Like guitars.

    I have a hard time placing the sound of a guitar in a way I can describe, and I'm never really sure how much of it is in the wood anyway.

  9. Doing this will give the intended result without that^ quirk:

    QUOTE (borge @ Nov 19 2010, 11:51 AM)

    if the bridge pup is too bright put a 500k resistor from bridge hot to earth, it'll sound like a 250k pot in bridge and bridge+neck positions, volume and tone will function as normal.

    Yep, that's where I got the idea, but I didn't have a 500k resistor. Except of course, I did- the tone pot.

    I like the quirk, though. Thanks for explaining it- I can see what's going on now. I had a feeling something was going to be leaking somewhere.

  10. Got it! :D

    I know this looks even weirder, but it really works:

    p90_tele_wiring_digram2.jpg

    This puts the 500k of the tone pot in parallel with the vol pot when the bridge PU is on, dropping the resistance to 250k.

    And it still functions as a tone control.

    It may not be quite kosher, but it sounds great in all positions.

  11. So in the first post you were worried about the neck pup being to bright

    Not sure where you got that, but in any case, no, I'm worried about the bridge pickup being too bright.

    Your wiring was quite odd

    Yes, the reason the tone pot was wired like that was to use it just for the bridge PU, so that with the tone turned all the way up, it goes straight to the volume pot, and as you turn it down, it increases the resistance between the pickup and the volume, while also rolling off highs.

    That was my thinking, anyway. Just wanted to verify it. As you can see, I don't know a lot about electronics.

    I've included a bass cut schem. because in my experience with teles with a single in the bridge and a p90 or hb in the neck is they're too different tonally, when you eq the amp its either : bridge-good neck-muddy/boomy or neck-good bridge-shrill and IME the best cure is replacing the master hi cut tone with a neck low cut tone.

    OK, this sounds good, too. So this low-cut only affects the neck pickup? If so, how is it integrated into the rest of the wiring?

    The circuit you drew is basially a pot and a cap, right? but is it the existing tone pot, or a separate one?

    Thanks, and sorry for any confusion

    edit: OK, I see now where I said neck instead of bridge- brain fart.

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