Lol... the picture of the electronics in my guitar was flagged?
I'v stuck with 500K pots other than on a guitar that I installed a Fralin Twangmaster. The name is definitely accurate. Way too bright with a 500K. Although I'm not sure it qualifies as a P90 style pup even though they market it that way.DallasTeleAg said:
For P-90's, I like 500k. I would imagine a 250k would be fairly dark and muddy for a P-90.
Those look like split single coils, like in a Fender Deluxe Tele; that is why you need 250K for those. True P-90s have the increased windings and dual magnets, so they are fatter than standard single coils.TequilaMockingbird said:I'v stuck with 500K pots other than on a guitar that I installed a Fralin Twangmaster. The name is definitely accurate. Way too bright with a 500K. Although I'm not sure it qualifies as a P90 style pup even though they market it that way.DallasTeleAg said:
For P-90's, I like 500k. I would imagine a 250k would be fairly dark and muddy for a P-90.
If you ever want a humbucker guitar to sound like a Telecaster, the Twangmaster does it.
Twangmaster
DallasTeleAg said:
Oh no... someone take my credit card away from me!!!!
https://reverb.com/item/37817662-paul-reed-smith-ce-24-2019-ezira-verde-smokeburst-w-gig-bag
That green though... DAYUM!
DallasTeleAg said:
Nice! Bet it sounds good through that Fender.
DallasTeleAg said:
Lol... the picture of the electronics in my guitar was flagged?
If I had it to do over again, I would FOCUS on learning the fretboard as I was learning songs/scales. I mean learning each note on the fretboard, vs. just "put your fingers here". That is probably the biggest issue I have dealt with in my ~25 years of playing. I can play pretty well, but still get lost sometimes if someone throws a weird key out there. This is easier to learn once you understand where same notes appear relatively on the strings (e.g. an A note on the 5th fret on your low E string also appears on the 7th fret on your D string, one octave higher).ruddyduck said:
for you more advanced guys...knowing what you know now, what would you have focused more on in the beginning to accelerate your learning curve? once passed the learning your basic chords phase that is.
ruddyduck said:
also curious if any of you are big pedal guys.
Aggiemundo said:
So hopefully this isn't too off topic of great and top notch electrics. I've got a fourteen year old son who loves rock, real rock, and is dying to learn to play electric guitar. He's asking for a guitar for his birthday and lessons. I'm in a place where I can get him the best to start with. What would you recommend?