|
|
 |
Understanding Guitar Wiring
What is a capacitor and how does it work?
|



Updated 10/03
Capacitors, or "caps," are simple electronic components
that are typically used in guitar electronics as filters
or barriers for certain frequencies. High frequencies
will pass through a cap, while lower frequencies are blocked.
The value of the capacitor will determine the frequencies
that pass (refer to Diagram #7). Using the filtering properties
of a cap, we can affect the tone of the guitar.
Higher frequencies travel more readily to ground, and a guitar can sound muddy as the volume is rolled off. Many builders overcome this problem by using a "treble bypass" capacitor between the input and the output of the potentiometer. The most common treble bypass caps are 680 picofarads (pf) and .001 microfarads (µf). The higher the value of the cap, the more upper frequencies are allowed to travel through it. A tone pot uses the same properties of a cap, but instead of letting the frequencies slip by to the amp, they are sent to ground. Most tone control caps are of a higher value than treble bleed caps, so the overall effect will be more noticeable, with more tonal flexibility.
How is a tone pot is wired?
There are several ways to wire a traditional tone control, yet they all end up working the same way.
Diagram #8 shows the most common method. |
 |
 |



|
|
|
 |
|
 |
|
|