SUaPYG wrote: ↑Fri Dec 20, 2024 7:40 am
With only one pickup, what is the purpose of the selector switch?
Hi there! So this is wired the same way an old Fender Esquire is wired. Think of this as a very early "Rhythm/Lead Circuit" that Leo developed for the earliest versions of what we now know as the Telecaster back in the late 40's/early 50's.
Position 1 on the switch is just the pickup to the volume and the output, no tone control filter available. That would be your "Lead" position. You can roll the volume down, but that's it.
Position 2 introduces the tone control as an option. This makes it a selectable sound. You can pre-set your tone control rolled off slightly and be able to recall the sound quickly in the middle of a song without needing to turn the knob down. This could be a "Rhythm" setting for you, or just a tonal color change.
Position 3 takes the signal and filters it through a different capacitor with a significantly darker characteristic than the normal tone cap. This would be the primary "Rhythm" tone, much like people used old Gibson guitars for a long time, by selecting the warmer sounding neck pickup as the Rhythm tone, and the much brighter/punchier bridge pickup as the Lead tone.
Leo was able to accomplish that same dynamic shift with a single pickup by using different tone capacitors to vary the sounds in a simple but effective way, so when we make a Solamente Special, that's how we typically wire them, just like the old Esquire models of the early Fender days.