Sir Ricardo
09-16-2005, 08:42 PM
Hello!
A question regarding shielding…. I think.
Here is my situation.
I’ve got a DTC, a great guitar….H2/SA/SA. In addition to sounding great, playing great, looking great….it also is completely silent when it is plugged in. No buzz, hum, etc., when at rest (as long as you are grounding it).
On the other hand, I’ve got a mid-80s ESP Eclipse, with 2 humbuckers….sounds great, plays well, looks good…and it slightly buzzes when plugged in.
I’ve compared the Anderson and ESP side-by-side, and there is no doubt, the Anderson is hum-free, the ESP is not.
I just got back from Guitar Center, where I took my ESP to compare it to new and old Les Pauls, just to see & hear if they were any quieter. They were not. All of these humbucker-equipped guitars have some level of hum. Not a lot, but you can definitely hear it when nothing is being played.
Except for the Anderson.
Now, my first question. What causes the Anderson to be hum-free? Is it the shielding paint in the control cavity? Something else?
I don’t believe my ESP has graphite paint in the control cavity, at least it doesn’t look like it. I can’t say about the Les Pauls.
If it is the shielding paint that deserves most of the credit…..my second question: when using shielding paint, is the control cavity the only part of the guitar to get painted? Or are the pickup routes, and the wiring boreholes also coated with paint? I’ve never used graphite paint, but am interested in trying, if it seems like this will “solve” the problem.
If copper tape would work, that actually might be easier. Any thoughts?
Thanks for any ideas and comments- -
Cheers,
Richard
A question regarding shielding…. I think.
Here is my situation.
I’ve got a DTC, a great guitar….H2/SA/SA. In addition to sounding great, playing great, looking great….it also is completely silent when it is plugged in. No buzz, hum, etc., when at rest (as long as you are grounding it).
On the other hand, I’ve got a mid-80s ESP Eclipse, with 2 humbuckers….sounds great, plays well, looks good…and it slightly buzzes when plugged in.
I’ve compared the Anderson and ESP side-by-side, and there is no doubt, the Anderson is hum-free, the ESP is not.
I just got back from Guitar Center, where I took my ESP to compare it to new and old Les Pauls, just to see & hear if they were any quieter. They were not. All of these humbucker-equipped guitars have some level of hum. Not a lot, but you can definitely hear it when nothing is being played.
Except for the Anderson.
Now, my first question. What causes the Anderson to be hum-free? Is it the shielding paint in the control cavity? Something else?
I don’t believe my ESP has graphite paint in the control cavity, at least it doesn’t look like it. I can’t say about the Les Pauls.
If it is the shielding paint that deserves most of the credit…..my second question: when using shielding paint, is the control cavity the only part of the guitar to get painted? Or are the pickup routes, and the wiring boreholes also coated with paint? I’ve never used graphite paint, but am interested in trying, if it seems like this will “solve” the problem.
If copper tape would work, that actually might be easier. Any thoughts?
Thanks for any ideas and comments- -
Cheers,
Richard