4003 Hum
Moderator: jingle_jangle
Result !! I unsoldered the two volume pots and bathed them in methylated spirit very thoroughly. The grit and dirt that came out surprised me. I then blew them dry and made sure the meths had evaporated. I re-installed them and Bingo ! The bass is as quiet as it ever was now, the hum has gone ! Proof that the WD-40 was obviously causing a ground problem. We are up and running and I am one happy guy tonight ! Thanks everyone for your help and advice.
- beatlefreak
- Senior Member
- Posts: 6160
- Joined: Wed Jun 14, 2006 5:45 am
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Thanks everyone. Believe me the WD-40 is relegated to bicycles and cleaning the lawn mower now ! Now hold on a minute that lawn mower has been playing up and getting very difficult to start of late ! Just jesting, but as you can imagine I am no fan of the stuff now ! It has been a valuable lesson learned and after playing bass for 27 years I should have known better. The truth of it is that I have never had a bass go faulty on me in all those years so I have never had to get too involved ! It is amazing really. I felt as though I had lost a limb whilst it was out of action. We are all ship and ready for gigging again now though ! One thing is for sure that if I get noisy pots in the future they will get a blast of compressed air and that is it !
- soundmasterg
- RRF Consultant
- Posts: 1923
- Joined: Tue Oct 01, 2002 1:06 pm
If you get noisy pots in the future, the compressed air may not work, in which case you should use De-Oxit, or another cleaner meant for electronic parts like pots. Its readily available and not all that expensive.
I'll add a side note: If you have to clean pots, Acetone is another thing that works well since it evaporates quickly. You would not want to use it on anything that used plastic shafts or casings however. Nylon shaft CTS pots are fine with Acetone. I would still treat the pots with De-Oxit after the acetone application to make sure no residue is around. I would suggest to do this yourself to make sure nothing is left of the stuff you used also.
How did I find out that acetone works too you ask? Someone I know accidently got loctite inside some pots which froze them up pretty well. Acetone is listed as a solvent for loctite, and putting some in the pot and rotating the shaft a lot cleaned out the loctite rather well.
I'll add a side note: If you have to clean pots, Acetone is another thing that works well since it evaporates quickly. You would not want to use it on anything that used plastic shafts or casings however. Nylon shaft CTS pots are fine with Acetone. I would still treat the pots with De-Oxit after the acetone application to make sure no residue is around. I would suggest to do this yourself to make sure nothing is left of the stuff you used also.
How did I find out that acetone works too you ask? Someone I know accidently got loctite inside some pots which froze them up pretty well. Acetone is listed as a solvent for loctite, and putting some in the pot and rotating the shaft a lot cleaned out the loctite rather well.
My neighbor uses it on his car to remove tar!
I watched him and was amazed. It didn't appear to do any short term damage to the finish. Anyone else hear of this?
I watched him and was amazed. It didn't appear to do any short term damage to the finish. Anyone else hear of this?
"Freedom of expression is important, but I have learned that people want to know how much you care before they care how much you know."
The only time a bass player gets noticed is when he stops playing.
The only time a bass player gets noticed is when he stops playing.
