syscokid
Ambassador of War & Peace
Test piece????Darker still???
Test piece????Darker still???
Test piece????
That may not necessarily be the ideal piece to use for a test piece.
That may not necessarily be the ideal piece to use for a test piece.
That test piece is exposed end grain, whereas most of the guitar body uses face grain. Face grain is more resistant to absorbing finishes than end grain.
If you have some unused face grain wood, it would be a better sample to use for determining final finish color.
I agree, but dont have any scrap since we built it at Fender.
My only concern in the test piece was finish compatibility. Thats also clear shellac in the photo, but the body will receive amber shellac
TBH, the pics at post 33 and 36 have two very distinct lighting sources. It almost looks like two different guitars. I wouldn't go darker, though. Especially since the amber shellac is supposed to "warm" or "antique" the existing colors.



.33 & .22! Too large for normal applications.
.33 & .22! Too large for normal applications.
.33 & .22! Too large for normal applications.
For real…as in 10 times too large for normal guitar applocations!
Now, if these were .033 or .022 we might be in business. if such were the case, I’d lean toward the .022 capacitors.
It depends on what you want out of your tone control.
You will not get 360° use of a tone control until you drop under .015uf.
I have a few hundred box capacitors in .018uf which is a really good value with far more useable range than .022uf, even though the difference appears small on paper.
0.01uf will yield 360° of useable tone control without ever getting muddy.
I've started using Jonathan Parish Treble Bleeds on the neck pickup side with capacitor values between .010uf and .018uf.