simoncroft
Well-Known Member
I have three similar basses: a Fender Standard 'boner' Jazz Bass from 1989, a partso with a MIM neck and CS pickups I put together, and a Tokai Jazz Sound (probably from China) I've put a lot of work into, including upgrading the pots to CTS. The Tokai is playing really well since I dressed the frets, but the tone was really dark compared to the other two. Given that the Tokai has ceramic pickups, that seemed counter-intuitive, so I opened up the control plate. Everything seemed to be right, so I was a bit mystified.
That's when I bent the legs of the capacitor up to read the value on the side. I'm not expert in the electrical side of things, so it took a Google search to decode what 473K2G actually meant. That's .47uF to us mere mortals. Doh! It should be .047uF. Not sure if I ordered the wrong part, or the supplier messed up. Whatever, I ordered 10 of the correct value for so little money, it's not worth bothering about.
Meanwhile, I took the .47uF out of circuit and, 'hey!' it sounds so much better.
That's when I bent the legs of the capacitor up to read the value on the side. I'm not expert in the electrical side of things, so it took a Google search to decode what 473K2G actually meant. That's .47uF to us mere mortals. Doh! It should be .047uF. Not sure if I ordered the wrong part, or the supplier messed up. Whatever, I ordered 10 of the correct value for so little money, it's not worth bothering about.
Meanwhile, I took the .47uF out of circuit and, 'hey!' it sounds so much better.