The rest of it are sold..
Oh man, I could have used that like yesterday... Now I have to dig back in and redo things all over. I have the push pull set as the tone knob too because that makes more sense to me, but unlike the wiring showing there, my push pull knob only has two spots to solder to on the bottom. Got things buttoned up and working other than that though. The push pull pot is the one on top to try and show the difference between mine and the one in the diagram.Check this super 7 out. I can explain the "vol kit" mod. Its a resistor and capacitor in parallel.
It decreases the characteristic "tone sink" as you adjust volume. At least that's what I believe. Never deployed it. I can get you the actual values or google it.
Also note, Your "push Pull " switch goes on tone, not vol, on this mod.
It is working, just not the 7 sound mod I hoped to complete as well. Having the neck and bridge together is the goal behind that. The pot I got was a CTS pot from stewmac.com, a little more money and better ratings than the others that look like the one in the diagram but after talking to a friend I know who works for a custom guitar manufacturer, he says they are all pretty much the same. At least the tone knob will be easier to wire than the volume knob was.That's sharp looking Tele . So if I have this straight, it's working now? My push / pull is from AllParts. It looks like the switch in the diagram. It was $12.99
The two-leg one you have I've never seen before. Looks more like an interrupter. But if it's working now you're golden. ...
Bought a Telecaster blank today, Biggie ! HH style. This way if I want to put a rail or a bridge single in, I can do it later.Hey @Bondo 440 do you ever build from blanks?
LOL well there about a dozen different guys out there cutting them with CNC machines. It won't be nothing like @BrewinHooligan 's gorgeous Tele !That's awesome. I forgot about that post. But I was at a lumber supplier and saw that they had blanks for guitars and thought of this thread. And I'm talking blocks...still needed yo be cut and shaped. But looked pretty cool. They also said they would cut 3/8" Spanish cedar to order. Which was the main reason I stopped in.
Shelves for a gun cabinet conversion in the works.What you doing with Spanish Cedar? Gonna make some trays?
Sounds good ! Storage is essential. Once you have it ... you wonder how you lived without it.Shelves for a gun cabinet conversion in the works.
I dig those old Japanese guitars. I have a 60's Univox 12 string and a short scale bass, both with original parts and electronics. They have a nice tone, something that would be hard to get out of a new guitar.Hate to whore up this thread. But it's called "show us your gear" so, here's my old 1969-72 old Kay ( Teliko ? ) Japan guitar.
Original parts still around, pic #1 . Give you an idea of the origional. Pickguard long gone.
You can see the reshaping in two places to bring the giant pocket a little bit back to normal.
Fixed neck cracks.
The second pic, on left, how it was before I started Saturday.. This is like it's 5th revision.
People artificially "relic" guitars. They sand down the finish by the "wrist wear" areas.
But this 45 year old guitar is the real deal. With many stories. I might leave the rustic look, not sure.
Temporary modified "Strat" pickguard for now. I have a blank pickguard on order I'll shape a better design later.
That is freakin awesome ! Snap a picture, at least of the Univox 12x.I dig those old Japanese guitars. I have a 60's Univox 12 string and a short scale bass, both with original parts and electronics. They have a nice tone, something that would be hard to get out of a new guitar.
I love it! I would leave the finish, you don't want to hide the stories that baby wants to tellHate to whore up this thread. But it's called "show us your gear" so, here's my old 1969-72 old Kay ( Teliko ? ) Japan guitar.
Original parts still around, pic #1 . Give you an idea of the origional. Pickguard long gone.
You can see the reshaping in two places to bring the giant pocket a little bit back to normal.
Fixed neck cracks.
The second pic, on left, how it was before I started Saturday.. This is like it's 5th revision.
People artificially "relic" guitars. They sand down the finish by the "wrist wear" areas.
But this 45 year old guitar is the real deal. With many stories. I might leave the rustic look, not sure.
Temporary modified "Strat" pickguard for now. I have a blank pickguard on order I'll shape a better design later.
That's what I love about it too. The EHX is not what I would call cheap either, I paid $140 very lightly used but it is either hardly any gain or in your face and it isn't very clean at all. The Double Barrel is super versatile and will get tons of use for what I play so I will get my money's worth. Those reviews don't do it justice. I need to order the little red remote soon so I can switch the gain setting on the left side on stage easily, it's a great feature.That. Was. Not. Freakin. Cheap ! Congrats !
I watched the (second) demo video here https://www.jhspedals.com/products/guitar-pedals/double-barrel/
Love the 2 channel. Crisp highs. Nice clean overdrive.
Looks like nice, straightforward shaping, too. ( My only pedal is the BOSS ME25 ... you can get "lost" in it. )
You already have one. I would think if you gut your dead EHX you could just use that to switch. Throw out the internal board and go from pedal switch to jack. Plug in your patch cable to the shotgun.I really think that is just a glorified on/off kind of trigger.That's what I love about it too. The EHX is not what I would call cheap either, I paid $140 very lightly used but it is either hardly any gain or in your face and it isn't very clean at all. The Double Barrel is super versatile and will get tons of use for what I play so I will get my money's worth. Those reviews don't do it justice. I need to order the little red remote soon so I can switch the gain setting on the left side on stage easily, it's a great feature.