Soldering Pot Backs
This is part 2 of the video series on wiring up guitar electronics.
All the metal parts of the guitar need to be tied to a common ground, including the pot bodies. If you don’t do this, you end up with noisy ground problems. A good place to wire the ground is to the back of the pots.
There’s a few tricks for successfully soldering to the backs of the pots. First up is a hot iron. I’ve tried with a 25w iron, and it just doesn’t cut it. 40w works, but be sure to let it heat up for 10 minutes or so before trying. I use a cheap Radio Shack iron which switches between 25 and 40w. Also, you need to roughen up the surface of the pot to get off any oil or grease, and to give some good grooves for the solder to adhere to – I just use 100 grit sandpaper.
John Doe
November 8, 2009 @ 11:43 pm
nicely presented… tq for sharing bro…
Jeremy
January 20, 2010 @ 10:12 am
I had a question for for in regards to soldering the ground wires to the back of the pot. My project is a Paul Reed Smith SE with one volume pot and one tone pot, both of which will be push/pull pots for series/parallel switching. With a push/pull pot, there is a round section that looks like the back of a regular pot, but the back of the pot where you would normally do all your soldering is occupied by a box that houses the lugs for the switch. I’m wondering if I need to attach the ground to the side of the round part of the pot back or if the attaching the ground the box housing the lugs would work. Here’s a picture of the pot I’ll be working with: http://www.rsguitarworks.net/rsstore/popup_image.php?pID=210&image=0
– Jeremy
By the way, love the blog. Keep it going.
John
January 20, 2010 @ 10:33 am
Hi Jeremy,
Good question. That’s a standard Alpha push-pull. The enclosure of the switch is electrically connected to the enclosure of the pot. You can double-check this with a multi-meter- just check for continuity between the pot shaft and that tab, and you’ll find them connected.
See the very bottom of the switch enclosure, there’s a little tab sticking out, under the switch lugs? That’s a fine place to wire up grounds – or you could use the switch enclosure itself if its easier. Just roughen up with sand paper, use a very hot iron, and be careful not to sit the iron there for too long, to avoid damaging the components.
-John
xxcowslayerxxx
March 10, 2010 @ 6:02 pm
no but i think i know what the problem is because the guitar works its just
got alot of static when i turn the tone/volume knobs some loud buzzing but
i think you already made it clear what happened i think i over heated one
of the pots and/or fried the caps, because one of them i held it on there
for a long time because i was trying to de-stick some wires and the solder
wont melt, still wont, i held it on there for over a minute so yea i guess
ill just cut the wires off and replace the pot
xxcowslayerxxx
March 10, 2010 @ 6:02 pm
and caps
xxcowslayerxxx
March 10, 2010 @ 6:03 pm
and thanks a ton for the tips and help man much appreciated, keep doin what
you doin bro
ProcrastinatorsUnify
March 13, 2010 @ 7:52 am
Brilliant Video, absolutely fantastic, No other way to say it
Josh D.
April 3, 2010 @ 3:18 am
Hey John,
These videos are very helpful – thanks tons. The clarity with which you provide these instructions is impressive. Kudos.
JD
Eric Öhman
April 11, 2010 @ 12:08 pm
You have such informative videos, really appreciated! As for grounding the
lug, what’s your experience in bending the lug and solder it directly to
the back of the pot? I’ve seen a lot of photos on the internet with that
being done.
kedocom
June 25, 2010 @ 3:41 pm
I think I may have fried a pot or cap too as the bridge pickup sounds very
thin and the neck pickup cuts in and out when its not in middle
position(any way to test this?) ….. oh well …. first time to wire …
wish I would have seen this video first! ….. oh, and the guy at radio
shack said I should use siver solder and so I did, but its awfully thin and
seems to need to be fed a lot in order to accumulate, any tjoughts on this?
thanks and thanks for the very informative vid!!!
ShortFingeredShreder
July 11, 2010 @ 8:53 pm
Oh, that’s why the solder didn’t hold, I had to sand the pots first.
Daniel King
September 1, 2010 @ 9:42 am
ok i need a little help, i have a real basic setup, one humbucker 1 vol,
but the jack doesnt werk, with certain positions of the cable i lose my
signal completly…any ideas?thax
Stewart Cochrane
October 7, 2010 @ 8:40 am
@Sabotagedband chances are you have overdone soldering and it has flowed
into inner part of pot. Hold pot at angle heat up lug and solder should
flow to end. Then use desolder pump to removed XS solder.
John
November 19, 2010 @ 2:33 pm
@christiancoker1 – i use a cheap a 40w iron, and you can see in the video
how long i hold it. As long as the iron is hot (i let it warm up for 10
minutes or so), it shouldn’t take long for the solder to flow onto the pot
back
Shawn Gray
December 21, 2010 @ 7:47 pm
@johnplanetz thanks alot sir.
bahicks20
December 29, 2010 @ 9:56 pm
Are tone pots and volume pots universal?= meaning can i use regular 500k
pots for volume and tone?
badyearXY
January 1, 2011 @ 10:58 pm
this is helpful!!! i just have a couple of questions. 1. if i’m installing
a minihumbucker in place of a p90 is the wiring gonna be different? 2. if
the pickups i’m installing come with wires do i just solder the one that it
calls a ground to the pot?? i know these are stupid questions but its my
first time doing this and im scared to shits!
Dutch K9
January 3, 2011 @ 4:37 am
Okay (taking a deep breath) … no fear, just do it! I’m off to the hardware store for some additional tools and materials. With the help of your videos I should be able to get this beauty (Vantage VS696-12, solid electric 12-string with SD StagMag -neck- and Ducncan Custom -bridge-, 2 vol, 1 tone, 3-way toggle, coil split mini toggle and phase switching mini toggle – let’s keep it simple for starters) singing again …
Kees.
(no electro-technical education or experience at all, wish me luck! 🙂 ) Thanks for the crash-courses John!
John
January 3, 2011 @ 8:18 am
Sounds great- Good luck!
-John
Dutch K9
January 30, 2011 @ 4:12 pm
… and so she does! (sound good). I made a few mistakes, wired the switches wrong way around, but that was fixed easily, last hurdle would be the tone pot, which is currently working in reverse. Thanks to SD schematics 🙂
Thanks again John, for educating me on the basics. I now have the tools and the guts to take on a couple of other ‘projects’ I have lying around. I’ll keep you posted!
Kees from the Netherlands.
John
February 1, 2011 @ 9:53 am
Nice work 🙂 Mistakes are just a natural part of the process.
Enjoy!
John
ed g.
March 1, 2011 @ 9:15 am
Thanks for the vid! I am currently wiring my Epiphone Les Paul Studio. I
changed the humbuckers for Golden Age humbuckers with the 4-wire
connection. I swapped out the old pickup selector and got a Freeway switch
from Stewmac. I had to increase the size of the hole to fit the new switch.
In doing all the soldering, the back of the pots were giving me the most
problems. I don’t know if my S-iron is giving the heat output it should cuz
your solder melted much faster than mine. Any suggestions?
John Cooper
March 14, 2011 @ 10:25 pm
@edteaches – you need a good hot iron to get the pot hot enough to melt
solder. i used a 40w iron, and let it heat up for about 10 minutes. the tip
can also make a difference. a really fine or narrow tip doesn’t heat up a
large surface area well. if you use a larger tip (like 1/8″), that can help.
John
March 14, 2011 @ 10:31 pm
@97warlock – the ground just needs to be electrically connected. you want
to avoid ground loops (giving the signal more than one possible path to
ground), as that can cause hum. star grounding is a good way to avoid
that– wire all your grounds to a single point, and then wire that point to
the final ground target (like the jack lug). do some searches on ground
loops and star grounding and you’ll find what you need.
97warlock
March 15, 2011 @ 6:15 am
Ok,Ive wired ALL my ground wires to one point & Ive even went ahead &
shielded the cavity AND the back cover and it hasnt decresed the Hum at
all. ….whats odd though is , its a 3 way Toggle & I get NO hum in the
bridge position,yet bad hum from middle & Neck position. Doubt its the
pickup because i bought it new & used it in my last guitar for about 8
months. I was impressed by how silent it was. Now……HUM city. Im at wits
end!
MrV1C7OR
June 17, 2011 @ 11:22 am
@johnplanetz I’m new in this, can you explain me ¿Can i make a guitar with
just a Humbucker, an Input jack and a 3-way switch? i’m making electring a
clasic “spanish” guitar, and i want to use only the necessary components.
¿Can i ido it? Thank you very much
tenhundredkills
September 14, 2011 @ 1:05 pm
Will a standard 30 Watt iron suffice for melting silver solder? My Jackson
for whatever reason has silver solder and my current iron (of unknown
wattage) won’t melt it.
tenhundredkills
September 14, 2011 @ 1:46 pm
@johnplanetz I let my iorn heat up for about 20 minutes and I got nothing.
Looks like I’m getting a better solder! Thanks anyway!
tenhundredkills
September 27, 2011 @ 12:03 pm
@doyengicp I just found that out I had the same problem yesterday. Rather
buying a 60W iron that I’ll only use once or twice, I just went to a local
music shop. It saves money in the long run.
John
September 29, 2011 @ 5:53 pm
@wedel219 – Huh. You should be able to get it to melt! The primary reason to use the back of a pot is that it’s a nice convenient big metal place to which you can solder a bunch of stuff 🙂 A secondary benefit is for noise reasons- keeping all the metal parts of the guitar grounded (in this case the pot body and shaft). If you’re giving up on the pot back, you could just use a pigtail instead (an exposed wire connected to a ground point to which you can solder the other ground wires).
RocknRollParadiase
October 2, 2011 @ 1:55 pm
by the end of this video, are those wires on the pots which will be the “level 0 volume” and should I add a capacitor instead? what exactly would a capacitor do that is different?
John
October 9, 2011 @ 9:06 pm
@RocknRollParadiase – In these videos, I’m wiring this circuit using the diagram I posted at my blog at planetz back on 9/21/2009, titled “Riviera P93 Circuit Wiring”. The “level 0” volume is accomplished on a volume pot, wired as voltage divider, when the pot is turned all the way to the side wired to ground. One side is ground, other side is signal, and the center is the output. Turning the pot adjust the ratio of ground and signal. A cap is sometimes used on a volume pot for treble bleed.
BCGadgets
November 15, 2011 @ 8:34 pm
ha anyone every grounded a truss-rod?
John
November 22, 2011 @ 12:56 pm
@BCGadgets – it doesn’t seem necessary. The truss rod doesn’t make contact with the strings or anything else in the electronics.
Manny
November 21, 2011 @ 5:35 am
I bought a Bill Lawrence single Pickup and I have wired it into my strat.
So I have Bill Lawrence in neck, stock single in mid and GFS crunchy rail at bridge.
I tried to rewire things and solder (first time trying soldering) to help me understand what the wiring is about.
I took black wires from singles and black+silver from GFS, tinned them together and then soldered them to a ring tongue terminal. On another spot on that ring I soldered the black wire ground coming out of the trem cavity. I then took a piece of wire (I covered it with electrical tape) and soldered it to jack ground and to that ring. I had trouble with the black GFS wire – it is very thin. But I think I sandwhiched it between the other thicker ground wires good enough to make the ground connection.
I tested and I find that the neck pickup is working good – no noise
All other positions work with some noise (which sounds sorta like a cracked hum)
Except for the bridge position which barely has output and has same noise.
I also find that the tone pot is not working at all for any position
Do you think I killed the tone pot by overheating? or do you think it’s just a ground connection problem?
I appreciate any help you can provide – thx
John
December 1, 2011 @ 8:09 am
Hey Manny,
I apologize for the delay- I somehow missed your comment in my inbox “waiting for moderation”.
It is highly unlikely that you killed the pot with heat. Much more likely that you’ve got a bad solder joint or wiring mistake. I recommend you use a multimeter (buy a cheap $5 one if necessary), and use it to check that everything is properly connected. You should quickly find the problem- either an accidental short, or a broken connection.
Good luck!
John
Manny
December 1, 2011 @ 11:41 am
Hi
thx for getting back to me
I think the soldering was bad.
I disconnected the middle pu (I never use it)
and I then replaced the gfs hum with stock hum (just 2 wires as opposed to 4)
Less wires, less soldering (or at least “neater” soldered joints). tested and both work fine
thank you
John
December 1, 2011 @ 2:04 pm
Hi Manny,
Must’ve been a bad solder joint. Glad to hear you’ve sorted it out.
John
Dazcam
November 28, 2011 @ 11:49 am
Instead of grounding it with a piece of wire, can you simply bend the lug back and solder it to the body of the pot? Just to save on the number of wires being everywhere ofcourse
John
November 29, 2011 @ 1:56 pm
@Dazcam – yes, no problem
andykillian
November 30, 2011 @ 7:46 am
hi, im planning on getting new pickups for my guitar. when they say its 2,3 or 4 conductor, what does that mean? please reply man
John
November 30, 2011 @ 9:05 am
@andykillian – a single-coil pickup has 2 conductors- 2 wires. One for signal and one for ground. A humbucker is really two single-coils stacked together, so it has 4 wires. However, sometimes they internally connect the two grounds together. And sometimes they gang the two signal wires together into one. With 4 wires, you have more flexibility for coil splitting, etc. See my blog at planetz for my articles on humbucker wiring and coil splitting.
andykillian
December 2, 2011 @ 12:14 pm
@johnplanetz thanks so much, that helped alot
pitol678
December 4, 2011 @ 6:02 pm
fantastic videos, thanks!
PanzarMetal
December 16, 2011 @ 2:53 pm
Hi, I tried everything you said but nothing works, I have a 60w iron.
And even worse with the spring hook plate ground wire, please help!
John
December 16, 2011 @ 3:09 pm
@PanzarMetal – make sure you let the iron heat up for awhile. Add some solder to the iron tip to get it flowing. If you’re still having problems, maybe your iron is simply not getting hot enough (may you need a new one).
PanzarMetal
December 16, 2011 @ 11:55 pm
@johnplanetz Its hot enough to melt isolation on a wire while tinning a wire.
maybe i should change the tip from a pencil point to a flat one ?
John
December 18, 2011 @ 5:18 pm
@PanzarMetal – excellent observation. A larger tip will be better for heating up big areas. My Weller has interchangeable tips, and I use the 1/8″ flat tip for heavy work. I only use the fine pencil-tip point for soldering on PCB’s, etc.
PanzarMetal
December 19, 2011 @ 1:47 am
@johnplanetz Thanks for the compliment but you forgot to mention one more thing!
I’m trying to solder the part which is held by screws and 4 springs, they take the heat away faster, so the proper way i should do is to take off that part and solder it on a block of wood so there would be less heat loss.
THank you for the tip!
FacingItAlone
December 19, 2011 @ 6:37 pm
To rewire does the wire have to be stranded or a strip?
John
December 26, 2011 @ 10:20 am
@FacingItAlone – solid core wire can be less flexible and more likely to break. It’s much more common to use stranded wire.
JonsBrain
December 20, 2011 @ 1:48 pm
How do I know which lug to solder the ground wire to?
John
December 26, 2011 @ 10:21 am
@JonsBrain – you need to have a basic understanding of your circuit. Understanding some basic electronics, and looking at some circuit diagrams will help you. There’s some links to resources in the FAQ at my blog at planetz.
RuneScapeRoots
December 29, 2011 @ 6:55 pm
I am making my own guitar and am putting in the Zakk Wylde EMG set. It doesn’t come with a 3 way switch or the wires for it, what gauge wires do i need to connect the switch to the
‘B157 EMG pickup buss’ that came with the pickups?
John
January 1, 2012 @ 8:53 pm
@RuneScapeRoots – 22 or 24 gauge will be fine.
geohuete94
February 10, 2012 @ 3:32 pm
the pots that came with the pickups i ordered are 25k, and the three prongs or legs or whatever theyre called are too small to bend back to solder the volume one
John
February 12, 2012 @ 10:03 pm
@geohuete94 – I actually prefer not to bend pot lugs to directly solder them to a pot back. I just use a short wire instead.
tulsa9999
March 4, 2012 @ 5:35 pm
Hi John, I don’t see any rosin around the solder puddle on the back of your pots in the vid here. I’m having an issue with residual rosin flux around all my solder joints, should I clean this stuff off and if so what should I use? Thanks.
John
March 20, 2012 @ 10:19 am
@tulsa9999 – I never bother to clean away the flux, but then as you pointed out, I’m not really getting that much flux build up. if you’re worried about it, you could buy some flux remover spray at an electronics shop
doyengicp
May 17, 2012 @ 2:37 pm
IPA (isopropylic alcohol) removes it just fine usually.
97warlock
March 22, 2012 @ 5:13 pm
WHAT Gauge solder is best to use or EASIEST to use I should say. really need to know.
John
March 22, 2012 @ 5:16 pm
I usually use .032″ diameter
passthemike1975
March 24, 2012 @ 10:11 pm
Thanks, great demo, totally helped me replace a volume pot!
SIRONEDRAGON
April 6, 2012 @ 12:48 am
Cool John : )
mqmqmwmw
May 7, 2012 @ 7:28 pm
I like how you say “pot”
Panderelli
May 18, 2012 @ 11:12 pm
Excellent how-to. Still need to see pt. 1 and 2, but good job.
lucianos1990
June 4, 2012 @ 1:44 pm
You say “tin” alot, im guessing solderwire with tin is best for guitar electronics. Great video!
firestond
July 22, 2012 @ 11:04 am
“Tinning” is the process of putting a small amount of solder on the wire before you attach it.ie: you “tin” the wire before soldering it to the back of the pot
Whipper6709
June 25, 2012 @ 2:54 pm
Awesome videos, THANKS!!!
tpmbe
August 5, 2012 @ 3:08 am
excellent videos .. thank you
Ted Park
August 29, 2012 @ 12:00 am
Hi, thanks for the vid. I had a few questions and was hoping you (or anyone) could answer them.
You roughen up the back of the pot physically so the solder will “adhere to it”. Is this because there is more surface area for the solder to adhere to, or because it removes oxidization and exposes clean metal? If it is the latter, will a drop of flux resting on the back of the pot for a few minutes also do the job?
John
August 30, 2012 @ 3:14 pm
I’m not totally sure why it works- but I know it does 🙂 I imagine it’s a combination of both exposing clean metal and giving more surface area. No harm in trying the flux pen first, and if that doesn’t work well, break out the sandpaper.
pher35
September 11, 2012 @ 5:00 pm
Never, Sand the back of the pot! It is coated to accept the solder. If the solder isn’t sticking you haven’t heated the pot enough. Iron is put on the back of the pot near the spot you want to solder. Lay wire to be attached in the pot. When the pot is hot enough the solder will melt and and flow over the wire and pot. solder should spread out, if a blob your connection is poor. solder is applied to the piece not iron.
AnnihilaticJC
October 24, 2012 @ 5:08 am
Is this grounding the pot? coz he’s using the tip which is meant for grounding (or at least thats what i heard)
John
October 24, 2012 @ 9:08 pm
The back of the pot is used as a convenient big pad on which you can solder together ground wires. It also grounds the metal parts of the pot.
Davesintexas
November 12, 2012 @ 12:24 pm
Ya know with ALL the wires that are going to be connected why do it this way on the Pot to Back of Pot Ground? Why not just bend that part back and touch it to the back and solder it into position? That is the way I do it. Plus, I have seen plenty of these done by the Chinese and they just use a strip of clean single metal wire to do the job. But, as before when shoving these in and out of Semi Hollows and SUPREMES any Less wire is a good wire ya know?
John
November 13, 2012 @ 9:05 am
I’ve seen that plenty of times too, but I’ve just never been a fan of bending back the lug like that. This is a case of personal preference- they’re electrically identical of course. I’d hate to see a lug break off a pricey pot (though I’ve only seen a lug break off once- and it was probably bent back/forth a few too many times).
Davesintexas
November 13, 2012 @ 10:50 am
Yep, I too have seen the lug break off on several older ones. But, not wanting to actually change out a vintage POT I simply solder to a connection point and it always works as long as there is no solder run off. My main objection is simply adding another piece of wire or LOOP that can trap other wires within the body as you are sliding in the remaining parts. Less is always better specially on a Supreme. What a nightmare to upgrade from Chinese POTs to GIBSONs.
Marfaozinho
November 21, 2012 @ 8:13 pm
Where is the basic security, do you make this above to the bed? people dont make this inside your restroom protect yourself
Jack Wade
February 1, 2013 @ 9:39 am
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I thought this was disabled years ago, but it’s still there!!!! DATA stored in the HALL EFFECT of electric lines jumps time
Energy Equals Life dot com
atomicfile2
March 8, 2013 @ 12:15 pm
Hey hows it goin im just wondering is it normal for a 40watt iron to turn blueish in the middle and also I heard thqt its not good to sand the back of the pots…is that true?
John
March 8, 2013 @ 1:49 pm
It’s fine for the iron to change color as it is used. And the tip will get black.
Leave a blob of solder on it when you turn it off to help protect the tip.
I think it’s fine to sand the pot-backs, as I demonstrated in this video.
atomicfile2
March 8, 2013 @ 12:20 pm
And also the tip turns black (its a new iron)
atomicfile2
March 8, 2013 @ 2:14 pm
Oh okay thanks a lot and also just a queation………I practice tinning wires and it just seems like it wont happen unless I touch the iron with the solder when applying it to the wire (which I know im not supposed to do) but if I dont then the isolation of the wire starts melting so in reality its getting hotter than the wire….. have you ever had this problem? Im a begginer sort of by the way
John
March 8, 2013 @ 2:20 pm
Adding a little solder to the iron will assist the flow to the wire by adding some flux, but you’re right that you’re supposed to heat the component and let the solder melt to it. You could try a flux pen, or the flux that comes in a bottle. Also, some wire is pre-tinned, which makes life a lot easier 🙂
Anthony Abbatangeli
May 2, 2013 @ 7:35 am
Thank You !!!
I have spent too many trying to do this without roughing up the pots. That was the missing piece of information.
CJDA9GTP
June 28, 2013 @ 6:44 am
Thank you!!!
wseeback
August 13, 2013 @ 6:42 am
You really make the best videos for this stuff. Easy to understand and follow what you’re doing. And make you feel confident that you know what you’re doing. But, I shouldve whatched this before attempting on my own. Damn it
sooperphattman
September 24, 2013 @ 4:22 pm
Do the grounds all have to go to the same pot or can the go to any pot?
John
September 26, 2013 @ 4:06 pm
No they don’t have to all be on the same pot, but it’s good practice to do “star grounding”, to avoid ground loops.
G. Robinson
October 6, 2013 @ 4:02 am
Hey John , nice vid! Do you need to solder a wire to the back of the pot(ground lug) or can you solder the ground lug directly to the pot? I’ve seen a couple of different ways of doing it. Thanks.
John
October 24, 2013 @ 8:41 am
Both ways are fine. A pot lug can only be bent a few times before it’ll break off, but if you’re only doing it once, permanently, then it should be ok.
G. Robinson
October 24, 2013 @ 12:02 pm
Thanks John!
Leonardo Cesario
December 30, 2013 @ 6:10 am
Hey John, one question: to apply solder, you have to heat up the back of
the pot, but to desolder you have to place the tip of the iron directly on
the solder joint, is that right?
mario urbina
January 30, 2014 @ 9:17 pm
you fallow the manufacture instructions on the pick up wires do you? I know
different ways for different brands of pick ups
Joshua Bardwell
February 20, 2014 @ 11:56 am
When you tin the wires, make sure to twist the tip of the wire into a
point. If it fans out, then it will be harder to push through lug holes,
especially small ones like on mini-toggles or cases where you have more
than one wire going into a lug.
Jay Lee
March 23, 2014 @ 3:07 pm
Hey I’ve heard that you should never scuff up the back of pots since the
actual pot is plated with what will help to let the solder flow onto. Is
this true? This is from another youtube video that strongly suggested
that you DON’T do this. Hmmm…
Tim Smallwood
March 25, 2014 @ 11:52 am
Great video’s John. I’m in a place where I have no tech so I have to do a
lot of this myself and I have like 5 guitars. I wish I had you hear to
explain a guitar I have that has two humbuckers, one hum in the bridge and
a single coil stacked rail hum in the neck that is slanted. But, there’s a
5 way switch. I can’t tell how it works, but it’s cool. I wish I knew so I
could wire my two hums in my strat the same way.. Anyway, thanks for the
cool vids. Tim
jmel23515
April 28, 2014 @ 10:09 pm
what size tips do you recommend for the iron when working on guitars?
DNA Tech
May 11, 2014 @ 11:39 am
I need a volume pot for my PRS SE EG. Any suggestions? PRS? CTS? Anything a
noob should know before ordering? Thanks!
Dial Upp
June 11, 2014 @ 5:04 am
Wait what are the wires called that you use?!
Chris Ficquette
June 18, 2014 @ 7:12 am
Thanks for this. Great tips!
Chris Ficquette
June 18, 2014 @ 7:12 am
Thanks for this. Great tips!
Alex Knight
July 22, 2014 @ 11:29 pm
Dude, you just saved my guitar. Thankyou.
gRosh08
September 14, 2014 @ 7:03 pm
I like you method…Thanks!
josé sampaio ramos
October 16, 2014 @ 1:21 pm
Great tips! can you help me? my inbanez sometimes the power chords are
muddy and other times they´re ok. do you know why it is happening? it´s the
same chord at the same place on the fretboard. thanks for your attention.
Morley Robertson
October 20, 2014 @ 4:17 pm
Never hold a wire with pliers when stripping. On an uninsulated wire it
will damage the outer strands and on an insulated wire you could cut the
insulation. I know that the wires you were doing this to were grounds but
it still is not a good idea.
Blake Johnson
October 29, 2014 @ 10:24 pm
Can you use a bit of high E guitar string as your ground wire?
Skippy McStringStrum
November 29, 2014 @ 3:02 pm
Odd question:
As someone that does TRY to solder pots, but is afraid of damaging the
parts… how long would one need to hold a soldering iron against a pot or
switch to actually have permanent damage?
Skippy McStringStrum
November 29, 2014 @ 3:02 pm
Odd question:
As someone that does TRY to solder pots, but is afraid of damaging the
parts… how long would one need to hold a soldering iron against a pot or
switch to actually have permanent damage?
charlie
December 30, 2014 @ 7:20 pm
Hi i was wondering if anybody may know. im working on a strat and had to re solder some of the volume pots. when i looked at the schematics for it i noticed some of the wires arent on the correct tab on the volume and tone pots. does this matter?
John
December 31, 2014 @ 12:46 pm
Sometimes, minor differences in wiring and component order can produce an equivalent circuit. In your case, I guess if it works satisfactorily, then don’t worry about it.
John
R.R. Alphawolf
March 14, 2015 @ 1:55 am
does this work on any other guitar?
IwishIwereJoe
March 27, 2015 @ 6:39 pm
I’ve noticed that some people ground all the pots together with one piece
of wire , why is that ? I need to learn more about this stuff
chuck jones
April 29, 2015 @ 8:25 am
John, are you soldering over a cotton comforter @ 2:50 ?
🙂 great video bud, always helpful.
Simone Manca
May 6, 2015 @ 2:01 am
What tipe of soldering iron are you using?
marcospiau123
May 8, 2015 @ 7:53 am
Good video, man. I’ve had some trouble soldering without roughing up the
metal.
Marcus Dugan
June 22, 2015 @ 6:49 am
Really helpful video. Well done.
CaptainChaos88
July 15, 2015 @ 8:56 pm
Called my local guitar shops and they told me it’s gonna take from 2 weeks
to a month to get my pickups installed. Gonna do it myself again…but my
skills aren’t the best. Cool video.