I'm beating my feeble brains out over this one.
I have a non-logo'ed Quarter Pound pickup that I've had maybe fifteen years. The whole time I've had it, it has lived in the neck position of my strat.
For the past 13 years, I haven't played the guitar. As I was cleaning it up to play again, the five way switch had gone bad (or was too dirty to fool with) so I replaced it today with another genuine Fender switch.
Now, my 1/4 pound is weak as hell. Not when used with the middle pu, but when I use the QP all by itself. (So much for the out of phase theory.) There are only two leads on it, black and white, and I wired the switch just like the one that came out. The mid and bridge pickups work just fine.
Before swapping the switch, the QP worked perfectly. So I think I either didn't wire the switch correctly after all (I took it all apart no less than FOUR TIMES to check my work), or something is wrong with the switch, or something is wrong with the pickup.
Any thoughts?
Thanks,
Keith
I have a non-logo'ed Quarter Pound pickup that I've had maybe fifteen years. The whole time I've had it, it has lived in the neck position of my strat.
For the past 13 years, I haven't played the guitar. As I was cleaning it up to play again, the five way switch had gone bad (or was too dirty to fool with) so I replaced it today with another genuine Fender switch.
Now, my 1/4 pound is weak as hell. Not when used with the middle pu, but when I use the QP all by itself. (So much for the out of phase theory.) There are only two leads on it, black and white, and I wired the switch just like the one that came out. The mid and bridge pickups work just fine.
Before swapping the switch, the QP worked perfectly. So I think I either didn't wire the switch correctly after all (I took it all apart no less than FOUR TIMES to check my work), or something is wrong with the switch, or something is wrong with the pickup.
Any thoughts?
Thanks,
Keith
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