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Posted

Fixed now, cleaned up, and setup.

 

Flattened the neck and socket.

20250713_083042.thumb.jpg.eb39588bb0ad7883d114e5b502cc4178.jpg

 

While the neck is off it got a wash in antibaterial hand soap and a fret polish using a kit that came with some D'addario strings.

It's a very simple solution. Here's the before:
20250713_083449.thumb.jpg.63d1370f0414b31adedcf2d1bdb9d2d0.jpg

 

Now a quick rub - behave.

fret_polish.thumb.jpg.65d3f06c1eeb3611076534483a5a3c60.jpg

 

Nice.

frets_after.thumb.jpg.294013219b8a857dba6f0036160676bf.jpg

 

So now it is back together. It fitted together in a slightly different place. A few more tweaks of truss rod and saddles brought it into shape a little better than before.

That's about as good as it gets, and it's not bad.

Ready to go from my bedroom woodwork workshop and polishing area, to my bedroom electronics department for new pots.

 

Spector_woodwork_done.thumb.jpg.0e2182fa9e45d0870adac8e4fee13a63.jpg

 

  • Like 1
Posted

Nice. Sounds great on your vid too, really cuts through with a lovely throaty lo-mid growl.

 

Just so you know, those inlays on the neck are aftermarket stickers, but nicely done. There will be dots underneath them....

Always preferred the full inlays myself so looks great!

  • Like 1
Posted
18 hours ago, cetera said:

Nice. Sounds great on your vid too, really cuts through with a lovely throaty lo-mid growl.

 

Just so you know, those inlays on the neck are aftermarket stickers, but nicely done. There will be dots underneath them....

Always preferred the full inlays myself so looks great!

Thank you. Yes, the bridge pickup is so close to the bridge it makes wild mid range sounds, and without a preamp. I like that. No battery.

 

Here's the plan. I've ordered a 'Custom Series - Crafted in America' headstock label from the web to replace the old 'Made in China' sticker. It will validate the inlays, and increase the instruments value to around £9,500.00. Cunning eh?

  • Haha 1
Posted (edited)

I've been working on a wiring diagram for my latest idea. There is some method behind the madness:

In everyday use I run with both pickups, tone and volumes full.

To get more middle, turn the neck pickup down a bit, less middle, turn the bridge pickup down a bit.

If I use a pick, I may turn the tone down on one of the pickups if I don't need all the click.

I haven't got a taping kill switch, and really ought to have one.

 

So here's the circuit I came up with.

The two pots represent a logarithmic MN taper pot that is built as one pot to make a centre notched pickup blend control. Easy to turn one pickup down a bit.

Then there are two tone switches. Quick selecting pre-set low pass.

Then a tapping kill switch (Break signal switch-Normally Closed, Press = mute) That will be fun.

 

Spectorwiringproposal.thumb.jpg.9c6c3881c0bf673effa2377fb60d37d2.jpg

 

The circuit analyser says it's all in phase and won't be hum cancelling. It may be because the pickups are single coil in the model. A bit more research there needed.

I intend to replicate the existing low pass filter spec. They have a subtle effect, just enough to take the growl out. No need to experiment, someone has already done that it seems.

I'd be interested to hear any comments or suggestions/improvements.

 

Edit: I've already had an idea. Looking for switches, the nice ones are the classic 3 way Les Paul type. I could upgrade the 2 way tone switches to 3 way and have a second pre-set tone with a lower dark shelf. Might be overkill?

Edited by Al Nico
Posted

My comment would be why you have two tone switches? You would have no tone cut with both off, the same tone cut if you have either of the switches on and double the cut if you put both on? If that is the effect you might as well have a centre off switch and do it all on one switch, rather than have the two redundant one on / one off modes?

Posted
1 hour ago, Woodinblack said:

My comment would be why you have two tone switches? You would have no tone cut with both off, the same tone cut if you have either of the switches on and double the cut if you put both on? If that is the effect you might as well have a centre off switch and do it all on one switch, rather than have the two redundant one on / one off modes?

Thank you. Seems the design is not right, unsurprisingly.

I looked at the circuit analysis. I'm new to this software but perhaps the report for one tone switch on, and one off is maybe showing both pickups being pulled through the cap.

 

Switch configuration: [Bridge Tone SW.ON2:KILL switch.ON1:Neck Tone SW.ON1]



 ┌───────────────────── C2 ─── R2 ──────────────────────┐ 
 │                                                      │ 
 ├─ Dual blend pot - Vol.1-2 ─── Bridge Pickup.North<- ─┤ 
 │                                                      │ 
─├── Dual blend pot - Vol.1-2 ─── Neck Pickup.North<- ──┤─
 │                                                      │ 
 ├────────────── Dual blend pot - Vol.2-3 ──────────────┤ 
 │                                                      │ 
 └────────────── Dual blend pot - Vol.2-3 ──────────────┘ 

'Dual blend pot - Vol' potentiometer acts as a volume control for 'Bridge Pickup'
'Dual blend pot - Vol' potentiometer acts as a volume control for 'Neck Pickup'
'Neck Pickup' and 'Bridge Pickup' pickups engaged, wired in parallel
All pickup coils are wired in-phase
This configuration is NOT hum-cancelling.

 

Ok. So I need to work out how to make them work independently. Learning is fun, for a while, then I'll ask for help.

Posted

I may have solved the issue. By putting the tone circuits before the blend pot keeps them operating per pickup, I think.

I decided I need a way to mute the instrument. In the end, a master volume pot it the most useful, and graceful way to do that.

Spectortoneswitch.thumb.png.0793a35641f85326717cd808f4b7a889.png

 

 

Posted

I'm now qualified as a passive pickup circuit inspector. From what I learned today by trial and error, I am able to identify that the person who wired the Spector made the same mistake I did in the design room.

 

The Pickups are wired to the volume pots, so the tones effect both pickups.

 

I'm going to start by wiring it up with the pots and listen how it works with the tones independent. I based the tone switch idea on their strangely limited performance, now under review.

Posted

Unfortunately due to the nature of passive electronics (and this is on all things - this is ultimately why fender got rid of the dual tones on the jazz), if you put them before the volume then the tone will work independently all the time the volume of one side or the other isn't full up. However, when the volume is all the way up, both tones are effectively wired together, and there isn't much you can do about it, without introducing active electronics.

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