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P Bass series-parallel switch? Hi, everybody. Using info and schematics I found here, I installed a series-parallel switch (push-pull on the vol knob) on my MIJ Jazz and wow, what a difference! New sounds available. I now own a P bass as well. I'm installing Bill Lawrence's P46 pickup, CTS pots and tone cap switch per this TB thread - http://www.talkbass.com/forum/f38/mu...ontrol-737912/ Wondered if series-parallel switching would get me anything. I don't have any sound in particular I'm looking for. Anybody done that to a P bass before? Thanks. |
meh. on a J, series gives a big fat boost and a new, chunky sound. on a P, parallel just gets you the same sound but weaker. the one exception i've run into is with super-hot pickups like the dimarzio split P, where each side is itself a little humbucker; that one sounds great in parallel, almost as strong but a lot clearer. |
Thanks Walter! That's all I needed to hear. Mark |
I had my Jazz Bass Special (P/J bass) wired with a S/P switch on the P coils, using Duncan Quarter Pounders. Switching the P coils to parallel worked nicely with the J coil, but I never cared for it with the P coils soloed. When I went to a Duncan Steve Bailey preamp, I discarded the S/P switching. John |
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I'd tend to agree with Walter. Wiring a JBass for series makes some sense as far as adding some tonal options but when you wire a PBass for parallel I think you're subtracting rather than adding. Those split coils in series in the "sweet spot" are almost all of what makes it what it is. |
well i was thinking of making adding a Jazz/MM pick up to my P-Bass i know the pickups are a lot differnet and was told not to mix them as too much out Maybe put in a 2P2T (on-on-on) or a 3way switch . i got another filter switch to make tho i am a bit scard as i think i would have to cut in to the guitar to make space (i got exam coming up so have to put back doing it) {i could make it outside the guitar, wire it in and see how it sounds before putting it in tho} |
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If you like the combination then you can do the mods or better yet simply trade your PBass in for a P/J model and save yourself all of the headaches involved with the mod. Especially since you'll need to rout the body for the Jazz pickup and add a volume and tone pot for it. |
oh no sorry .. not the mm P/J pickup its a MegaTone Switching what im worried about cuttign in to the guitar I dont mind about the P/J thing as its normaly so i know it works |
1 Attachment(s) I put a series/parallel switch on my 64 P bass back in 1976. Parallel was slightly thinner, with a little less volume and quite like a J pickup, but still humbucking. If I added a J pickup between the P pickup and bridge, I'd add a push/pull pot and wire the P pickup in series/parallel. In a headless, zeebrawood Explorer bass I built in 1980, I had a Dimarzio J pickup and P pickup, but I reversed the order. (why put the weaker pickup by the bridge?) For switching I put a Series/off/Parallel switch for each pickup. I used both series and parallel with both pickups and loved the tone of each. |
It could be useful if you need a thinner tone, it pretty much sounds like a Jazz neck pickup. Some songs don't work as well with a thumpy tone. |
I think one of the switching options in a Westone Thunder 1A (Single P pickup, but later versions are under a soapbar like cover) is series-parallel. But that is also combined with an active-pass switch and a filter-type EQ in active as well as standard tone so those additional options cloud the picture a bit. |
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