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Cable question

 
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dizzy



Joined: 26 Apr 2006
Posts: 401

PostPosted: Thu Dec 28, 2023 8:50 pm    Post subject: Cable question Reply with quote

Hey Scott!

Happy holidays!

I have a question about guitar cable.

I am dealing with dark tone when I roll off my volume on my neck humbucker.
This isn’t a problem with single coils for me, but with a humbucker, even with 500k pots, it turns to mud. I want to avoid a treble bleed circuit and 50s wiring if I can.

The first thing my guitar hits is an always on pedal. So the problem is the cable that goes from my guitar to my pedal board.

Right now I use a ten foot Mogami gold. I could go to 6 feet.

But I was also reading about Mogami platinum cable which is much lower capacitance.

Do you use platinum or gold?

Any other advice?

Maybe I should breakdown and use a treble bleed in my humbucker guitar.

Thanks Scott!
Dan
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Scott Henderson
The Man


Joined: 20 May 2004
Posts: 2124

PostPosted: Thu Dec 28, 2023 9:15 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Happy New Year Dan!

I use Mogami 2524 cable. I'm not sure if they put a name on that, like Gold or Platinum. As you know, cable drastically affects the tone, because the less capacitance, the less midrange.

I use a very short cable to my first pedal, about 4.5 feet, but I'm not sure that makes as much of a difference anymore because all my guitars have treble bleeds. It's not the traditional one that you're thinking of, because that one sucks - it makes a very tinny, unpleasant tone. This one is a new design by Suhr and it's much more subtile. I love it - when I turn down the volume I only get less gain and less volume, the tone stays exactly the same.
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dizzy



Joined: 26 Apr 2006
Posts: 401

PostPosted: Thu Dec 28, 2023 10:26 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Oh that’s awesome Scott.
Do you know if suhr shares his values for the resistor?
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Scott Henderson
The Man


Joined: 20 May 2004
Posts: 2124

PostPosted: Thu Dec 28, 2023 11:49 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'm not sure but it doesn't hurt to call them and ask. It's not just one resistor, it's a resistor tied to a capacitor, and there are several other resistors in there too. I've had this in my guitar for the last two tours, and I've never been happier with the ability to turn down and play chords with no treble loss. For anyone who plays one channel amps, this treble bleed would be extremely helpful.
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dizzy



Joined: 26 Apr 2006
Posts: 401

PostPosted: Fri Dec 29, 2023 1:01 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thanks Scott!
I’m going to research this.
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dizzy



Joined: 26 Apr 2006
Posts: 401

PostPosted: Fri Dec 29, 2023 11:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I found info on the circuit if anyone else is interested.
It was on the gear page straight from John Suhr so I don’t think he would mind if I post it here
I’m looking forward to trying it!


“When I worked at Fender in the mid 90’s I introduced on a few models my favorite treble bleed setup which I still use. What I did on the CS contemporary dinky series was a 680pf in parallel with a 150K resistor. Works great for 80% of the people to keep it balanced tone. If it’s too much you can put a dropping resistor after this parallel circuit in series.”


Not sure what the value of the 2nd resistor is but I looked up fender’s most recent treble bleed and they use a similar idea with 120k for the 2nd resistor.
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dizzy



Joined: 26 Apr 2006
Posts: 401

PostPosted: Tue Jan 02, 2024 11:17 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I installed that treble bleed.
Really cool!
It does not get thin like the other ones I’ve tried.
Also the taper of the volume pot stays smooth.

My fuzz cleans up lower on my volume knob—that all I have to get used to.

Thanks for the tip Scott
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Tommy



Joined: 25 Jul 2014
Posts: 11
Location: Belgrade, Serbia

PostPosted: Fri May 03, 2024 2:46 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

This treble bleed circuit might be the first gear tip/advice I got from this forum in more than 15 years that didn’t cut it for me. I always had a love/hate relationship with treble bleed and have gone last 10 years without one, but I thought, if Scott digs it all of a sudden, there must be something different to it than what I’ve previously tried. So, I tried it over the last weekend… the moment I turned up the amp during the sound check, my drummer turned around and yelled, “what’s wrong with that guitar, it sounds like s**t”… my midrange was gone, even with the volume up on 10 (at which point it shouldn’t have any effect but it does). It’s as if there’s a slight phase shift, and it doesn’t surprise me as that’s what happens when a portion of signal is passed through a cap. Yes it does retain more or less the same sound as you roll down the volume, but the core sound is very different compared to stock wiring. Now, we all hear things differently and I’m not here to put a bug in anyone’s brain, I just thought I might have a better solution to the problem.
I noticed that with stock wiring you do lose treble as you roll down from 10, but if you set volume to 8 or 9 and set amp eq and gain from there, now when you roll down, the tone stays pretty much the same. The only problem with that setting is when you accidentally hit 10 on volume pot, it drastically changes the tone and response, reintroducing all the shrillness and white noise. The reason why this happens (and why people install treble bleed) is that with volume at full, the pickups have a resonant peak somewhere in the 3.5-4kHz range. As we roll down the pot, the coil gets into greater interaction with other parts of the circuit and that peak gets flattened, which we percieve as treble loss (but only compared to volume on 10 - it is actually more flat eq-wise). So basically if you could somehow mechanically alter the pot so it couldn’t hit the last 1/10 of rotation, you’d be free to open it up with your pinky in full speed without finnicky adjustments.
Than it hit me that a simple ~50k resistor between the pickup switch and volume pot could act in the same way. The net result would be a -3dB dropoff which is the same as with volume on 9, so your guitar would be a bit quieter at full blast but it would have a full, fat tone with volume at max and you’d hardly feel the need for treble retention anymore. I’ve run bode plots and everything looks the way it should. I’ll try it in a few days and I can post the results if anyone’s interested.
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