2005SUBMARINER Posted May 2, 2006 Report Share Posted May 2, 2006 any of you fender strat owners have this problem ? i have an awsome sounding mexico fender strat its 1 of my favorite guitars iv owned but when i switch to the bridge or neck pick up i get a terrible noise that sounds horrible when i record on my pc .. would a 5 way swithch replacement get rid of that terrible humming sound ? or thats just the way theses strats sound ? thanx for your help .. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jonthebhoy Posted May 3, 2006 Report Share Posted May 3, 2006 There are two main sources of electrical hum and buzz in electric guitar systems, and both enter through the pickups and electronics. The sources are AC electrostatic fields and alternating electromagnetic fields radiated from electric wires, lighting dimmers, fluorescent light ballasts, power transformers in amplifiers et cetera. Pickup coils and unshielded wiring in guitars act as very effective antennae that capture these radiated fields and pass the unwanted hum on along with the guitar signal. Historically Fender's Standard Single Coils can be quite noisy and if you are using pc recording software there will likely be reactive IF between the guitar pick-ups, your amp and your pc monitor as, especially if you are working in a small environment e.g bedroom (and more especially if it has light-dimming switches!). Fender do still produce a Vintage Noiseless pick-up which will reduce the horrible buzz significantly. I'm not sure changing the pick-up selector will do much, unless it's faulty of course. One little tip that I have used is to line the pick-up cavities and jack socket chamber with silver foil (making sure of course that there is no contact with cables) which does help reduce IF. Other than this, make sure all your contacts are sound and clean. Hope this helps JTB Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
2005SUBMARINER Posted May 3, 2006 Author Report Share Posted May 3, 2006 There are two main sources of electrical hum and buzz in electric guitar systems, and both enter through the pickups and electronics. The sources are AC electrostatic fields and alternating electromagnetic fields radiated from electric wires, lighting dimmers, fluorescent light ballasts, power transformers in amplifiers et cetera. Pickup coils and unshielded wiring in guitars act as very effective antennae that capture these radiated fields and pass the unwanted hum on along with the guitar signal. Historically Fender's Standard Single Coils can be quite noisy and if you are using pc recording software there will likely be reactive IF between the guitar pick-ups, your amp and your pc monitor as, especially if you are working in a small environment e.g bedroom (and more especially if it has light-dimming switches!). Fender do still produce a Vintage Noiseless pick-up which will reduce the horrible buzz significantly. I'm not sure changing the pick-up selector will do much, unless it's faulty of course. One little tip that I have used is to line the pick-up cavities and jack socket chamber with silver foil (making sure of course that there is no contact with cables) which does help reduce IF. Other than this, make sure all your contacts are sound and clean. Hope this helps JTB man thanx so much ! i will try the foil thing & if that doesent work them ill replace the PU Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pete Posted May 7, 2006 Report Share Posted May 7, 2006 man thanx so much ! i will try the foil thing & if that doesent work them ill replace the PU If you've got about £100 to spend then this back plate does the same as the second coil of a humbucker but retains the single coil sound, it's basically a flat coil the you setup to be out of phase with the pickups so any stray electromagnetic fields get cancelled out. Backplate Silent Single Coil System Pete Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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