Before:
After (well, During, I should say):
Mods so far:
The first thing I had to do, however, was have Dave make me a set of bridge posts, because the Gotoh has those huge threads and thick posts, and the L.R. Baggs uses those smaller skinny ones.
Stewart-MacDonald used to carry Conversion Posts for just such a problem, but dropped them.
Anyhoo, Dave did an excellent job:
Before:
During:
After:
Dave's The Man
Anyhoo, I almost have the transducers where I want them except for one important factor: I need to make a mounting bracket that will hold them in place, because they get their best sound when slight (and I mean SLIGHT) pressure is applied to the back of the disc.
I've got some brass and steel shimstock that I can make the bracket out of, but I've got to come up with some sort of adjustable thing so I can set the pressure on the discs just right. I had one design that kinda worked, but the area of pressure was too small and it got more of a National/Lap Steel/Resonator tone (than banjo-type thing, only with sustain :ROTF: )
Anyway, once I scrounge up all the parts I need and figure out how/where to mount them on the inside so they don't bump loose, I'll be set.
I'm also going to replace the other On/On mini-toggle with another On/On/On mini-toggle.
The 3-way On/On/On switches will be wired thusly:
Switch #1: Humbuckers only / Hums + Piezos / Piezos only
Switch #2: T-bridge only / T-bridge + discs / discs only
The T-Bridge is ok - I might have to get the preamp for it because it's not getting the volume. My soldering work probably has something to do with it, as you have to solder each saddle lead to this little pad on this little circuit board. It's not shorting itself out, though (that I can tell), but since it's an unpowered circuit I may just sum the leads without the board and see what I get before buying the preamp.
The installation instructions for the T-bridge say to drill a hole for the wires into the control cavity.
Uh-huh. Yeah.
I nipped a bit of the back bottom edge of the bridge pickup bezel and fed the wires through there. Worked like a charm. Yeah they're visible on top, but not as visible as any holes I'd try to drill :ROTF:
Since the coil-tap/split switches are coming out, I'm probably going to put a couple of Push/Pull Volume knobs in it for that purpose.
After (well, During, I should say):
Mods so far:
- Changed the knobs to Abalone-topped chrome knobs
- Changed Gotoh bridge to Schaller/L.R.Baggs T-Bridge (piezos around the saddles)
- Replaced one 2-way On/On Coil Tap/Split switch with a 3-position On/On/On
- Partially installed a piezo soundboard transducer (disc-type) in the toggle-switch cavity
The first thing I had to do, however, was have Dave make me a set of bridge posts, because the Gotoh has those huge threads and thick posts, and the L.R. Baggs uses those smaller skinny ones.
Stewart-MacDonald used to carry Conversion Posts for just such a problem, but dropped them.
Anyhoo, Dave did an excellent job:
Before:
During:
After:
Dave's The Man
Anyhoo, I almost have the transducers where I want them except for one important factor: I need to make a mounting bracket that will hold them in place, because they get their best sound when slight (and I mean SLIGHT) pressure is applied to the back of the disc.
I've got some brass and steel shimstock that I can make the bracket out of, but I've got to come up with some sort of adjustable thing so I can set the pressure on the discs just right. I had one design that kinda worked, but the area of pressure was too small and it got more of a National/Lap Steel/Resonator tone (than banjo-type thing, only with sustain :ROTF: )
Anyway, once I scrounge up all the parts I need and figure out how/where to mount them on the inside so they don't bump loose, I'll be set.
I'm also going to replace the other On/On mini-toggle with another On/On/On mini-toggle.
The 3-way On/On/On switches will be wired thusly:
Switch #1: Humbuckers only / Hums + Piezos / Piezos only
Switch #2: T-bridge only / T-bridge + discs / discs only
The T-Bridge is ok - I might have to get the preamp for it because it's not getting the volume. My soldering work probably has something to do with it, as you have to solder each saddle lead to this little pad on this little circuit board. It's not shorting itself out, though (that I can tell), but since it's an unpowered circuit I may just sum the leads without the board and see what I get before buying the preamp.
The installation instructions for the T-bridge say to drill a hole for the wires into the control cavity.
Uh-huh. Yeah.
I nipped a bit of the back bottom edge of the bridge pickup bezel and fed the wires through there. Worked like a charm. Yeah they're visible on top, but not as visible as any holes I'd try to drill :ROTF:
Since the coil-tap/split switches are coming out, I'm probably going to put a couple of Push/Pull Volume knobs in it for that purpose.
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