A little 4001 fun
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
Maybe.
As for the .1 mFd capacitors, sounds like an old F****r Tele trick, but I could be wrong. Some years ago when I replaced the original pickups on my November '70 21 fretter with a set of my own, I also put in one such capacitor, more specifically between the "in" and the "out" lugs on the treble pickup volume control in order not to lose treble at low volume settings. It does work. Maybe that was the idea behind those caps on the 4002 harness.
As for the .1 mFd capacitors, sounds like an old F****r Tele trick, but I could be wrong. Some years ago when I replaced the original pickups on my November '70 21 fretter with a set of my own, I also put in one such capacitor, more specifically between the "in" and the "out" lugs on the treble pickup volume control in order not to lose treble at low volume settings. It does work. Maybe that was the idea behind those caps on the 4002 harness.
A Rickenbacker bass is much like the Jaguar E car - perennially ultra-fashionable.
Thanks John. I was going to grab the schematic for the 4004 to see how they are wired. Series makes sense. That seems to produce the most output.
You are right Serg, 4K per coil in series makes a lot of sense. Judging from the way the 4002 pickups are made, the goal was to make a very quiet instrument for recording. At this point I am guessing that the 4002 pickups are built this way:
Series humbuckers ~4K Ohms per coil constructed something like the HB1s with plates and/or bar magnets instead of poles.
You are right Serg, 4K per coil in series makes a lot of sense. Judging from the way the 4002 pickups are made, the goal was to make a very quiet instrument for recording. At this point I am guessing that the 4002 pickups are built this way:
Series humbuckers ~4K Ohms per coil constructed something like the HB1s with plates and/or bar magnets instead of poles.
