
moltenmetalburn
Active member
I posted this in another thread but thought i would be seen by more people as its own.
All this pickup installation talk has me wanting to share this information I found a while back by Helmuth Lemme on how to make a very cool tone device to shape the sound of your pickups. He wrote a German book on guitar electronics.
I figured just making it an easy to follow project would be cool.
buying new pickups is not the least expensive way to get a different sound out of your pickup. You can just tailor your current pickup to your liking or make many choices available.
changing the external load is. this replaces a standard tone control OR after experimenting one favorite value could be chosen. You can also leave one cap out so that position is your original pickup sound.
Change the external load of the pickup by using a rotary switch and capacitors to add different amounts of capacitance across the pickup. This shifts the resonant peak of the pickup around which is responsible for the bulk of a pickups voicing. many of you Im sure have heard heard of the varitone which is similar and you may also know of the seymour duncan pickup booster which has a pickup resonance switch based on the same principles.
The resonant peak is the frequency that has the highest output level. Practically no magnetic pickup has a flat frequency response and it's the frequency peaks & valley's that give pickups their individual "character".
Changing the frequency response with
different external capacitors parallel to a pickup coil
To backtrack a little and explain more about the resonant peak of a pickup:
The fundamental frequency response of a magnetic pickup.
Position and height of the peak vary from type to type
So all of the science aside there are only a few parts you'll need:
1. A rotary switch
I sourced one here:
http://www.parts-express.com/pe/showdet ... er=023-666
2 pole 6 position. shorting so it makes contact before breaking to avoid popping sounds. you only wind up using half of the lugs on the bottom.
Dano from Beavis Audio research made a diagram of the switch and how it works. the A or red side will be used and the B or green left unused.
Dano from Beavis Audio Research made a diagram to explain the rotary capacitor selector. In the diagram where the two wires enter the circuit board you would wire one wire to each side of the output jack so the capacitors are placed across the signal to ground.
The smallest lowest voltage caps are best for obvious size reasons. the the recommended range is 470 pF to 10 nF. that range is 30 capacitor values from 470pf to 10nf so a good starting point would be every five values which would loosely be as follows:
2. Capacitors:
470pf = .00047mF
800pf = .0008mF
1.8nf = .0018mF
3nf = .003mF
5.6nf = .0056mF
10nf= .01mF
Ive sourced these which are approximate values to make it easy for you :
470pf, 820pf, .0018mf, .0033mf, .0056mf, :
http://www.smallbearelec.com/Detail.bok?no=162
.01mf:
http://www.smallbearelec.com/Detail.bok?no=888
you could even go so far as to choose cap type for each setting. for instance the higher peak settings could be paper in oil to sweeten the highs and the lower resonant settings could be metal film for clear bass. have fun searching for values though.
The grand total is about $4.90 plus shipping! Have fun hacking up your guitar at your own risk!

All this pickup installation talk has me wanting to share this information I found a while back by Helmuth Lemme on how to make a very cool tone device to shape the sound of your pickups. He wrote a German book on guitar electronics.
I figured just making it an easy to follow project would be cool.
buying new pickups is not the least expensive way to get a different sound out of your pickup. You can just tailor your current pickup to your liking or make many choices available.
changing the external load is. this replaces a standard tone control OR after experimenting one favorite value could be chosen. You can also leave one cap out so that position is your original pickup sound.
Change the external load of the pickup by using a rotary switch and capacitors to add different amounts of capacitance across the pickup. This shifts the resonant peak of the pickup around which is responsible for the bulk of a pickups voicing. many of you Im sure have heard heard of the varitone which is similar and you may also know of the seymour duncan pickup booster which has a pickup resonance switch based on the same principles.
The resonant peak is the frequency that has the highest output level. Practically no magnetic pickup has a flat frequency response and it's the frequency peaks & valley's that give pickups their individual "character".
All quotes by Helmuth E. W. Lemme
"This method is inexpensive but can be very effective. With only a little expense for electronic components, the sound can be shaped within wide limits. Standard tone controls lower the resonant frequency by connecting a capacitor in parallel with the pickup (usually through a variable resistor to give some control over how much the capacitor affects the pickup). This will give you much more sound variation than a standard tone control."
Changing the frequency response with
different external capacitors parallel to a pickup coil
To backtrack a little and explain more about the resonant peak of a pickup:
The fundamental frequency response of a magnetic pickup.
Position and height of the peak vary from type to type
If you know the resonant frequency and height of the resonant peak, you know about 90 percent of a pickup's transfer characteristics; these two parameters are the key to the "secret" of a pickup's sound (some other effects cannot be described using this model, but their influence is less important).
What all this means is that overtones in the range around the resonant frequency are amplified, overtones above the resonant frequency are progressively reduced, and the fundamental vibration and the overtones far below the resonant frequency are reproduced without alteration.
How Resonance Affects Sound
The resonant frequency of most available pickups in combination with normal guitar cables lies between 2,000 and 5,000 Hz. This is the range where the human ear has its highest sensitivity. A quick subjective correlation of frequency to sound is that at 2,000 Hz the sound is warm and mellow, at 3,000 Hz brilliant or present, at 4,000 Hz piercing, and at 5,000 Hz or more brittle and thin. The sound also depends on the height of the peak, of course. A high peak produces a powerful, characteristic sound; a low peak produces a weaker sound, especially with solid body guitars that have no acoustic body resonance. The height of the peak of most available pickups ranges between 1 and 4 (0 to 12 dB), it is dependent on the magnetic material in the coil, on the external resistive load , and on the metal case (without casing it is higher; many guitarists prefer this).
The resonant frequency depends on both the inductance L (with most available pickups, between 1 and 10 Henries) and the capacitance C. C is the sum of the winding capacitance of the coil (usually about 80 - 200 pF) and the cable capacitance (about 300 - 1,000 pF). Since different guitar cables have different amounts of capacitance, it is clear that using different guitar cables with an unbuffered pickup will change the resonant frequency and hence the overall sound.
So all of the science aside there are only a few parts you'll need:
1. A rotary switch
I sourced one here:
http://www.parts-express.com/pe/showdet ... er=023-666
2 pole 6 position. shorting so it makes contact before breaking to avoid popping sounds. you only wind up using half of the lugs on the bottom.
Dano from Beavis Audio research made a diagram of the switch and how it works. the A or red side will be used and the B or green left unused.
Dano from Beavis Audio Research made a diagram to explain the rotary capacitor selector. In the diagram where the two wires enter the circuit board you would wire one wire to each side of the output jack so the capacitors are placed across the signal to ground.
The smallest lowest voltage caps are best for obvious size reasons. the the recommended range is 470 pF to 10 nF. that range is 30 capacitor values from 470pf to 10nf so a good starting point would be every five values which would loosely be as follows:
2. Capacitors:
470pf = .00047mF
800pf = .0008mF
1.8nf = .0018mF
3nf = .003mF
5.6nf = .0056mF
10nf= .01mF
Ive sourced these which are approximate values to make it easy for you :
470pf, 820pf, .0018mf, .0033mf, .0056mf, :
http://www.smallbearelec.com/Detail.bok?no=162
.01mf:
http://www.smallbearelec.com/Detail.bok?no=888
you could even go so far as to choose cap type for each setting. for instance the higher peak settings could be paper in oil to sweeten the highs and the lower resonant settings could be metal film for clear bass. have fun searching for values though.
The grand total is about $4.90 plus shipping! Have fun hacking up your guitar at your own risk!
