ninjaking67
Ambassador of Good Will
I think I will take Robert's advice and try a 0.015 uF in the bridge and a 0.01 uF in the neck.
I had a JB and a Jazz in my Jackson. I agree; they are pretty bright. I removed them when I did my mega mod to my Jackson.
However, one thing I did that helped tame them was to use a 250 K Ohm volume pot. I stuck with a 500 k ohm tone pot with a .022 cap for the tone. This worked pretty well.
When I did my mod to the guitar, I ended up putting a Seymour Duncan Trembucker in the bridge and I put a Seymour Duncan ‘59 bridge pickup in the neck.
As for the question about setting your controls as V-T-T or V-V-T, I think I’d consider how often you try to blend pickups with a typical Gibson layout. If you find that you normally run both pickups wide open when you have them both selected, the V-T-T arrangement is probably best. But, if you find that you like to adjust the relative volume of each pickup when you blend them, then maybe the V-V-T setup is better.
I like to blend a lot, which was part of the reason behind the “Les Paul-ization” of my Jackson.
Smitty,
If I go with separate volume pots I will use a 250kOhm for the bridge JB. That should help tame the bright bridge tone. I still think that I will go with the dual concentric pot to give 2 tones.
Smitty, what kind of trembucker did you replace your JB with?
I honestly never knew that the "JB" was Jeff Beck! Thanks for the lesson Eclecticsynergy!The JB really does do best with a 250K volume IMO. Some like them with 500K in a Les Paul, but especially for 25½" scale guitars I've always felt 250 sweetens the high end a bit. After all, the original was made for Jeff Beck's "Tele-Gib," an HH Telecaster.
One of the things I miss when playing two-pickup Fenders (and PRSs, my longtime favorite) is the ability to balance pickups using separate volumes. It gives access to such a wider range of tones... I love that the DGT has two volumes, my only PRS which does. Makes a big difference.
Smitty, what kind of trembucker did you replace your JB with?
The official Duncan company line is that JB stands for "Jazz/Blues," since Beck isn't an endorser. But Seymour did wind the first JB for him back in the London days.I honestly never knew that the "JB" was Jeff Beck! Thanks for the lesson Eclecticsynergy!
One of the things I miss when playing two-pickup Fenders (and PRSs, my longtime favorite) is the ability to balance pickups using separate volumes. It gives access to such a wider range of tones...
I think I will take Robert's advice and try a 0.015 uF in the bridge and a 0.01 uF in the neck.
Smitty,
If I go with separate volume pots I will use a 250kOhm for the bridge JB. That should help tame the bright bridge tone. I still think that I will go with the dual concentric pot to give 2 tones.
Should I be considering a 250 kOhm pot for the neck as well? I still haven't decided on which pickup will be used though.That actually sounds like a pretty good idea!
Should I be considering a 250 kOhm pot for the neck as well? I still haven't decided on which pickup will be used though.
That's not a bad place to start. I started with .015 uF caps when I did my Jackson mods. However, with the JB and a Jazz pickups, I soon went to .022 uF caps, as they are fairly bright pickups. I found the .015 caps didn't allow me to adjust the tone as much as I needed.



Me thinks your on to something here... very interesting...The JB really does do best with a 250K volume IMO. Some like them with 500K in a Les Paul, but especially for 25½" scale guitars I've always felt 250 sweetens the high end a bit. After all, the original was made for Jeff Beck's "Tele-Gib," an HH Telecaster.
