New for 2006?
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
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ricnbacker
- Veteran RRF member
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- Joined: Wed Aug 07, 2002 5:00 am
New for 2006?
New for 2006
Rickenbacker introduces the Vintage Tone Selector for 4003 Series basses. This additional control is included standard at no additional cost on all 4003 basses beginning in the 2006 model year.
Prior to 1984, Rickenbacker basses utilized a capacitor in the treble pickup circuit to emphasize treble tones coming from that pickup. However, changes in tone preference and a call for higher output led RIC to discontinue the use of this capacitor in favor of a more balanced sound. Nevertheless many users added this capacitor back into the circuit, experimenting with and sometimes preferring the sound of the older configuration, despite the resulting drop in volume.
Rickenbacker has now decided to give players a choice, allowing the best of both worlds. With a simple pull of the treble tone control, the Vintage Tone Selector will allow a player to move between both sounds at the drop of a hat. Pressed in, you'll hear the familiar balanced tone of the 4003, while pulled out to engage the circuit, you'll appreciate the bite and crispness popularized by such artists as Chris Squire.
who has the schematic for where I can put the cap in my `01 4003?
Rickenbacker introduces the Vintage Tone Selector for 4003 Series basses. This additional control is included standard at no additional cost on all 4003 basses beginning in the 2006 model year.
Prior to 1984, Rickenbacker basses utilized a capacitor in the treble pickup circuit to emphasize treble tones coming from that pickup. However, changes in tone preference and a call for higher output led RIC to discontinue the use of this capacitor in favor of a more balanced sound. Nevertheless many users added this capacitor back into the circuit, experimenting with and sometimes preferring the sound of the older configuration, despite the resulting drop in volume.
Rickenbacker has now decided to give players a choice, allowing the best of both worlds. With a simple pull of the treble tone control, the Vintage Tone Selector will allow a player to move between both sounds at the drop of a hat. Pressed in, you'll hear the familiar balanced tone of the 4003, while pulled out to engage the circuit, you'll appreciate the bite and crispness popularized by such artists as Chris Squire.
who has the schematic for where I can put the cap in my `01 4003?
The cap or the Vintage Tone Selector?
If you want just the cap, it goes where the red shunt is in this pic:
For the schematic, go to Rickenbacker's corporate website. The cap is C3 in this diagram:
http://www.rickenbacker.com/pdfs/19507.pdf
If you want just the cap, it goes where the red shunt is in this pic:
For the schematic, go to Rickenbacker's corporate website. The cap is C3 in this diagram:
http://www.rickenbacker.com/pdfs/19507.pdf
"A Noble Instrument Must Be Nobly Regarded"
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green_us90
- Intermediate Member
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- Joined: Fri Jun 04, 2004 12:23 pm
I would just put a wire across the cap and it is quickly reversable at a later date.
For a nice schematic look at Joey Vasco's site.
http://www.joeysbassnotes.com/TipsPics/06%204003%20wiring.pdf
For a nice schematic look at Joey Vasco's site.
http://www.joeysbassnotes.com/TipsPics/06%204003%20wiring.pdf
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blueflamerick
- Advanced Member
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- Joined: Wed Apr 30, 2003 1:43 pm
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I bypassed the cap on my C64 eariler this week and the tone and response of the horseshoe is much more to my liking. Much fuller sounding and a little louder than before. It is now a lot closer in sound to my V63, which is what I was after.
I recently went back to playing a Rickenbacker bass. Its like meeting an old friend again
I just soldiered wires over my caps also and left them in. I also figured out a circuit where you use one of the tone controls as a variable control for the cap and the other tone is for both pickups. I don't think anyone but me here has ever tried it as far as I know. The problem is that if you turn one of the volumes down especially more than about 3/4's you start to lose treble. I never turn them down much so it doesn't effect me at all. I turn the bass pickup down a little bit for bite that's all. The variable cap is nice it acts like a mid control and you can fine tune the amount of cap you want in the circuit. I never figured out where the treble was bleeding into ground through the volume controls but I never tried very hard either because it never bothered me, in fact I didn't even realize it for a while. I left one of my basses with the mod, the one with round wounds on it.
- beatlefreak
- Senior Member
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The reason you lose high end is because of the way the cap works in the circuit. The cap, along with the resistance of the volume pot, forms a high pass filter (blocking lower frequencies). As you change the volume, you change the resistance of the pot, which in turn changes the cutoff frequency of the high pass filter.
It doesn't actually bleed into the ground - It's working exactly as it's supposed to. You're actually fine tuning the amount of resistance in the circuit.
It doesn't actually bleed into the ground - It's working exactly as it's supposed to. You're actually fine tuning the amount of resistance in the circuit.
Ka is a wheel.


