No lows in treble pickup
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
No lows in treble pickup
i have a mid-late 70's rickenbacker 4001 that has an overall brighter tone than my other ricks, and a real noticeable difference between the bass and treble pickup. The treble really lives up to its name and has no bass. I swapped in a pair of replacements at both pickup positions, reverified the wiring and got the same results. The treble pickup has very very little bass, especially compared to the bass pickup. Overall it sounds nothing like my other ricks. All pots appear to be original and it's got the yellow .047 and .0047 caps. What could be the problem? Bad caps?
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jwr2
I just put in the push pull switch for a local Ric player here in Denver ... She had a 4001C64 ... she loved the slim neck but it didn't sound as good as her 4003 ... but now with the push pull switch she has it both ways ...
It was the first push pull circuit that I ever wired up ... it is a cool design and it works nicely ...
And I also used wire with red insulation ...
It was the first push pull circuit that I ever wired up ... it is a cool design and it works nicely ...
And I also used wire with red insulation ...
guys - with the .0047 cap removed, the low end is back in the treble pickup, however this bass still sounds a lot brighter, and different from my 73 4001 and my '88 4003 (these two sound similar, and a lot less bright). As I mentioned above, i tried two sets of pickups, and the pots appear original. Any explanation? I can maybe record a clip.
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jwr2
If you want to mellow out a 70s 4001 ... try putting in 250k ohm tone pots ... they sound really sweet with all 250k ohm pots and the original pickups and no cap ... I wired up several 70s 4001 basses this way and I was always pleased ... 250k ohm pots will make the bass a little less trebly and warmer sounding ...
- deblase4001
- Junior Member
- Posts: 128
- Joined: Sun Mar 04, 2007 8:13 pm
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jwr2
Gene ... 70s 4001 basses have 8k ohm high gains, the .0047 cap and 500k ohm tone pots ... the modern 4003 has 11k ohm pickups, no cap and 250k or 330k ohm tone pots ...
the higher the impedance number on a pickup the fatter it will sound, the higher the impedance number on the pots the brighter it will be, and the .0047 capacitor blocks all low mid and bass frequency response from a pickup ...
so with the capacitor, pots, and pickups there are 3 ways a 4001 will be brighter sounding than a modern 4003 ...
for my taste I like the .0047 cap removed and I like all 250k ohm pots in a 70s 4001 bass and I like the 8k ohm pickups in there as well ...
the higher the impedance number on a pickup the fatter it will sound, the higher the impedance number on the pots the brighter it will be, and the .0047 capacitor blocks all low mid and bass frequency response from a pickup ...
so with the capacitor, pots, and pickups there are 3 ways a 4001 will be brighter sounding than a modern 4003 ...
for my taste I like the .0047 cap removed and I like all 250k ohm pots in a 70s 4001 bass and I like the 8k ohm pickups in there as well ...
I have 78 and 79 4001's, the 79 is brighter than the 78. It is more than just the pickups that impact a bass's tone, these basses have almost identical pickups. Construction, materials and set up also have a lot to do with tone, every Rick sounds a little bit different from another one as do most brand basses. Generally though 70's Ricks are brighter sounding than later 4003's.





