Hi,
My Tribute S-500 made in Indonesia is gettng quite noisy, I have some problems.
1) It seems that pickups are microphonic because I can hear "clack" when I use pickups selector, but if I speak i can't hear my voice from the amp.
2) Sometimes I hear some crackle from volume pot.. I reduce it spraying some special liquid, but it wasn't enough.
So I looked at G&L part shop and I found some info about pots. Can I replace mine with the American series ones?
Thank You!
Replacing pots
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Re: Replacing pots
It would not be a drop in replacement because the USA pots are bigger. You would need to do some routing out.richardmilitia wrote:Hi,
My Tribute S-500 made in Indonesia is gettng quite noisy, I have some problems.
1) It seems that pickups are microphonic because I can hear "clack" when I use pickups selector, but if I speak i can't hear my voice from the amp.
2) Sometimes I hear some crackle from volume pot.. I reduce it spraying some special liquid, but it wasn't enough.
So I looked at G&L part shop and I found some info about pots. Can I replace mine with the American series ones?
Thank You!
If bought new and your guitar is still under warranty, you could take it to the dealer you purchased it. They should
be able to replace the noisy pots and pickups.
Hope this helps.
--Craig [co-webmaster of guitarsbyleo.com, since Oct. 16, 2000]
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Re: Replacing pots
Hi Richard,
I've had trouble with scratchy pots on my Tributes, and microphonic pickups on my USA S-500.
First the Tributes. Craig is right, the Tributes do not use the larger (and better), imperial sized USA pots. Smaller, metric mini-pots are used instead. I had real trouble finding replacements of the right size but ended up buying some Mighty Mite mini-pots on E-Bay. They have been fine. I've also seen Alpha brand pots of the right size being sold on E-Bay.
Now the S-500 pickups. When I bought my S-500 third hand the neck pickup wasn't working and the other pickups made a loud 'clunk' when you moved the pickup selector switch or tapped the pick guard. I sent the neck pickup away to a luthier to get fixed and took the other 2 pickups out to see what the problem might be. I also did some Google-ing and found that microphonic MFD pickups are pretty common. On closer inspection of my MFD's I can see why. The whole pickup is held together at the bottom by a large ceramic bar magnet that runs the length of the pickup. It is held in place by a couple of dabs of glue and not much else. The glue had become brittle and was no longer attached to anything on my pickups, so the big bar magnet was free to respond to vibration and go microphonic. I put some new epoxy glue on the bar magnet and the microphonics were cured.
In the meantime, the luthier e-mailed me back to say he'd re-wound the broken neck pickup and it now worked. He also commented that the bar magnet was loose and the pickups really should have been wax potted to make them robust. Did I want him to wax pot the pickup? Darn right I did. So I had the neck pickup wax potted and I must say it is the nicest (and quietest) pickup of the 3 in my S-500.
IMHO the MFD pickups could be constructed a little better than they are, and comprehensive wax potting is a must.
I got my hands on some Legacy pickups to install while the MFD's were out of action and they are a NICE, well constructed pickup, right down to the vintage cloth covered wiring. I can't see why the MFD's aren't built to the same standard?
If your guitar is still under warranty get everything fixed by your dealer and save some euros.
I've had trouble with scratchy pots on my Tributes, and microphonic pickups on my USA S-500.
First the Tributes. Craig is right, the Tributes do not use the larger (and better), imperial sized USA pots. Smaller, metric mini-pots are used instead. I had real trouble finding replacements of the right size but ended up buying some Mighty Mite mini-pots on E-Bay. They have been fine. I've also seen Alpha brand pots of the right size being sold on E-Bay.
Now the S-500 pickups. When I bought my S-500 third hand the neck pickup wasn't working and the other pickups made a loud 'clunk' when you moved the pickup selector switch or tapped the pick guard. I sent the neck pickup away to a luthier to get fixed and took the other 2 pickups out to see what the problem might be. I also did some Google-ing and found that microphonic MFD pickups are pretty common. On closer inspection of my MFD's I can see why. The whole pickup is held together at the bottom by a large ceramic bar magnet that runs the length of the pickup. It is held in place by a couple of dabs of glue and not much else. The glue had become brittle and was no longer attached to anything on my pickups, so the big bar magnet was free to respond to vibration and go microphonic. I put some new epoxy glue on the bar magnet and the microphonics were cured.
In the meantime, the luthier e-mailed me back to say he'd re-wound the broken neck pickup and it now worked. He also commented that the bar magnet was loose and the pickups really should have been wax potted to make them robust. Did I want him to wax pot the pickup? Darn right I did. So I had the neck pickup wax potted and I must say it is the nicest (and quietest) pickup of the 3 in my S-500.
IMHO the MFD pickups could be constructed a little better than they are, and comprehensive wax potting is a must.
I got my hands on some Legacy pickups to install while the MFD's were out of action and they are a NICE, well constructed pickup, right down to the vintage cloth covered wiring. I can't see why the MFD's aren't built to the same standard?
If your guitar is still under warranty get everything fixed by your dealer and save some euros.
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Re: Replacing pots
G&L does offer the Mighty Mite pots in their on-line store.Philby wrote:Hi Richard,
I had real trouble finding replacements of the right size but ended up buying some Mighty Mite mini-pots on E-Bay. They have been fine. I've also seen Alpha brand pots of the right size being sold on E-Bay.
All G&L pickups are fully wax potted. As with any potted pickup, over time they will need re-potting.IMHO the MFD pickups could be constructed a little better than they are, and comprehensive wax potting is a must.
+1, both issues would be covered under the warranty.If your guitar is still under warranty get everything fixed by your dealer and save some euros.
Hope this helps.
--Craig [co-webmaster of guitarsbyleo.com, since Oct. 16, 2000]
Welcome! Read This First
Got a G&L question? Check out the: G&L Knowledgebase
Current G&L Specifications and Options
Welcome! Read This First
Got a G&L question? Check out the: G&L Knowledgebase
Current G&L Specifications and Options
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Re: Replacing pots
Hi guys
I have a better one. I want to replace the original pot on my tribute Rampage with a push/pull pot for coil-tapping. But as you are all saying the asian ones are thinner and therefor the pot that I bought, wich was us-standard didnt fit. I could have drilled the hole bigger but I dont want to rape my baby
Does a pot like that even exist or do I have to stick with what I have?
I have a better one. I want to replace the original pot on my tribute Rampage with a push/pull pot for coil-tapping. But as you are all saying the asian ones are thinner and therefor the pot that I bought, wich was us-standard didnt fit. I could have drilled the hole bigger but I dont want to rape my baby
Does a pot like that even exist or do I have to stick with what I have?