Jump to content
Why become a member? ×

Active Ibanez - barely any volume from neck pup


Recommended Posts

This is weird.  When i switch on my amp,  and use blend knob to select neck pup or bridge, the bridge pup is fine, but when moving to neck pup, i get about 1 second of full volume, then it disappears, to the point where its barely audible in comparison to the bridge pup. This is not a pickup height problem, as its far too dramatic a change.  Nor is it an 18v  battery problem. I've fitted 2 different sets of fully charged 9v's x2

 

First thoughts were a dodgy wire on the blend pot, but this has proved not to be the case.  Could this be a preamp problem ?   If it is, i cant fix this. Too complicated

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Its a BTB770PB   5 pot,   3 band Pre.  VOL  BLEND  BASS MID TREB ..   its wiring chaos in there   😀

 

 

 

 

BTB3a.thumb.jpg.a3b284bf873750199a72d528bfe5ea98.jpg

 

 

ibbypre.thumb.jpg.23b45c49e73b9f8272b76a42d12621c5.jpg

Edited by fleabag
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Its possible that the blend pot is going AWOL, or maybe i need to pull the Neck Pup and check  that pickup wiring,  as the next thing to do.

 

By the way, the preamp is a Bart MK-2B  18v according to the stamp on the pcb

 

 

 

 

 

 

Edited by fleabag
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...

The preamp may well be dodgy. I'm pretty sure that Bart preamp will be similar to a Bart preamp that was once fitted to my Sei - the pickups are wired direct to buffers in the preamp, then the two buffer outputs go to the blend control. It sounds as if something funny is happening involving a capacitor in the neck buffer, though I can't be more specific than that. The solution for mine was replacing the preamp (with a Delano Sonar).

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Unfortunately, my talent for lectronics ends at soldering up a V V T  ,  J type ,  almost as simple as a P bass.

 

I dont know what a buffer looks like or where it is in that mess of spaghetti   :)

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You could see if you could get a direct replacement off Reverb - at least it's plug-and-play.

 

The vast amount of spaghetti is because of the buffers - they prevent the pickups interacting with the volume and blend controls. The average preamp has the pickups going into the blend and volume controls, then to the preamp, tone controls wired to that, then out to the jack. These Barts with onboard buffers have the pickups going into the preamp, then back out to the blend and volume, then back in to the preamp with the tone controls, and finally out to the jack.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I love Ibanez, I love BTB, I hate those fake Bart's. lol. No offense if you like 'em , that's the most important part.

Intermittant faults are mostly due to a grounding issue or a bad soldering. You have to check every wire and if it's not broken and correctly welded. 

 

Best option is to play and touch every component, wire, pickup to find the location of the issue.

 

BTW in worst case I have a set of BH2 pickups in stock, barely used, if you want them I can "sell" them to you for pennies. (coming from a EHB1000)

 

Hope it can help.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah no offence and yes i do like the pickups.  Tone is very subjective as we know.

 

Im pretty sure its not the pickup.  As you say, probably a solder joint, but havent found it yet.  I'll keep at it

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Finally -  found the bluddy culprit !!  The middle white block of the 3 in the preamp , below , was the perpetrator, and nothing to do with faulty blend pot or faulty pickups.

 

I had the bass on the floor, vol up, and dialling the  blend between  pickups, whilst probing the various terminations.  Found that middle white block had some dodgy crackles, and tapping it cut the volume and tapping again brought volume back. Pulled control cover off, fired up the solder station, ripped off the sticky back insulator, and heated all the solder joints up till i see the solder flow.

 

Job done - everything is as it should be.  @tauzero  Think you called it.  Dodgy preamp, but only a slightly failing solder joint rather than failing preamp.  Which is what @Marco.EB advised.  So you were both on the money.

 

Which joint, dont know,  cos i heated them all up, but carpet bombing all joints has sorted it

 

ibby.thumb.jpg.ec64809f46f804aae93ae2272a7ecbe6.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

 

Edited by fleabag
  • Like 4
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 17/02/2024 at 23:35, tauzero said:

 

They're MK2, not BH2. I think it's just the BH2 that are the "fake Barts".

 

MK1 , MK2 and BH2 are "fake Barts", produced by Ibanez. So as Doug from Bartolini told me. They're not produced in USA and just co-designed with Bartolini. As long as the tone is on the spot for the player it doesn't matter anyway. I don't like BH2 but I like MK1. I like high end pickups as much as the cheap DX5 on my old '99 Ibanez. No judgement here, just to share infos I got from Bartolini directly (I'm in contact with them to get Bart's for my future projects).

 

On 17/02/2024 at 23:26, fleabag said:

Finally -  found the bluddy culprit !!  The middle white block of the 3 in the preamp , below , was the perpetrator, and nothing to do with faulty blend pot or faulty pickups.

 

I had the bass on the floor, vol up, and dialling the  blend between  pickups, whilst probing the various terminations.  Found that middle white block had some dodgy crackles, and tapping it cut the volume and tapping again brought volume back. Pulled control cover off, fired up the solder station, ripped off the sticky back insulator, and heated all the solder joints up till i see the solder flow.

 

Job done - everything is as it should be.  @tauzero  Think you called it.  Dodgy preamp, but only a slightly failing solder joint rather than failing preamp.  Which is what @Marco.EB advised.  So you were both on the money.

 

Which joint, dont know,  cos i heated them all up, but carpet bombing all joints has sorted it

 

Cool you've found the issue and fixed it. 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 hours ago, Marco.EB said:

MK1 , MK2 and BH2 are "fake Barts", produced by Ibanez Cort.

 

FTFY.

When they were first released, they were in the Cort Artisan series (A4/5/6 and B4/5/6). Cort produces them in-house and it wasn't until years later when Ibanez first used them in some of their Cort-built models. Cort is also behind the Hipshot-licensed hardware and Select by EMG pickups, which can be found in many Korean-made Hohners and used to be in the Spirit by Steinberger guitars and basses and several Cort basses in the 1990s :)

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

After all that faffing around, it seems the preamp has changed it's mind and now no volume at all from either pickup.

 

Just massive crackles and static noise when touching the preamp in certain areas. By the time i've paid someone to sort this out, i may as well replace it.

 

The Mk2B preamp on it's own  ( no pots etc ) is too hard to find,  so it looks like i have to replace the whole lot with a 3 band 5 knob preamp.  No mini toggle.

 

Apart from East UK  units, is there anything else i could look for ?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 29/01/2024 at 22:05, PaulThePlug said:

What Ibby?..

Think i've got Pups n 3 pot Pre out an SR400, Maybe A 2 Pot Stacked out of an older SR300...

Any Board Numbers, maybe try a board to check?

 

Your Pups OK?

I'll have another look, see what Pups 'n Pre i've got from the 300 and 400...

£DunnoButReasonable?

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Pff I got an Ibanez pre, but the wires are cutted... if tou want to solder them back, I can send it to you for free ... Otherwise I have a Uni-Pre 5 on my Nitti and it's awesome.

 

Edit : or I have a Warwick 4 knob pre but you will have to put a dummy knob.

Edited by Marco.EB
  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, fleabag said:

 

👍   Thanks Marco -  if i cant find an original MK 2B, i think the EAST uni-pre 5 is what i'll  go for 

 

John is really a nice guy.... costed me a lot in Belgium because of VAT and import fees but worth the 400... it's the most versatile pre I ever tried, transparent although, a bit too many options but it's inside that is interesting.. caps can be swapped, frequencies can be adjusted, each pickup gain too... careful, it takes a lot of place... I recommand you check if your compartiment can embed it if it's the same as my Nitti:

https://youtu.be/rGdyNtqf9G8?si=uPU2rFYvJNVO6VQN

 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks Marco.  Yes his preamps are spectacular

 

I've been a personal friend of John since the early 1990's, jammed with him, been to his house on several occasions, and owned a few different East preamps,

so i'm quite famiiar with him and his electronics.

 

If i  decide on the UNI-PRE 5,  i will go to John's home, and take my bass, just to be sure.

 

I dont speak your language mate, so the YouTube video is not possible to watch  :)

 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...