KILL The Hum and Buzz!! - Keeping Your Single Coils QUIET!

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  • Опубліковано 20 вер 2024

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  • @jimmyvolakis5194
    @jimmyvolakis5194 4 роки тому +928

    I use the J Mascis technique: “just don’t stop playing, man“

  • @km_studios
    @km_studios 5 років тому +836

    Man, Darrell, you were a real buzz kill in this video

    • @DarrellBraunGuitar
      @DarrellBraunGuitar  5 років тому +73

      😂😂😂

    • @CaloomClark
      @CaloomClark 4 роки тому +6

      @@DarrellBraunGuitar i bought a telecaster today as my first guitar with a fender champion 20, the guitar wont produce any noise all i get is a static noise and whenever i press any of the strings at all i can hear a sort of static boom in the amp, any help appreciated

    • @lukeschiltz9688
      @lukeschiltz9688 4 роки тому +6

      Kristian Todd Hello I also have a Fender Champion 20 and a single coil Fender (a Strat). I hope you’ve solved your issue by now, but if not, here is some input. Assuming there are no issues with the guitar or amp itself, here are some tips. To get a nice, clean sound, turn the Voice knob toward the left to one of the cleaner settings (tweed or blackface), and turn the gain knob down but not all the way down. I usually keep the gain knob at 2 or 3 for a clean sound. This should hopefully solve your issue.

    • @user-zn4qy7tw9t
      @user-zn4qy7tw9t 4 роки тому +1

      @@CaloomClark probably the speakers but the guy on top of me tells you what to do.

    • @allisonholmesmusic97
      @allisonholmesmusic97 4 роки тому

      Luke Schiltz I also have a Strat and a Champion 20. Thanks for the tip.

  • @truckercowboyed2638
    @truckercowboyed2638 5 років тому +1092

    You need to rename the wall behind you Mount Tele.

    • @MicahBuzanANIMATION
      @MicahBuzanANIMATION 5 років тому +5

      hah nice!!

    • @RobbieTayVaughan
      @RobbieTayVaughan 5 років тому +10

      I've noticed he changes the line up back there every so often

    • @Mickocarbomb
      @Mickocarbomb 5 років тому +7

      @@RobbieTayVaughan was gonna just say that, every video where he has more than a few of that videos specific guitar he usually swaps the guitars for that body style. Strat video = strat wall, single cut = Single cut wall.

    • @gregmerritt9366
      @gregmerritt9366 5 років тому +1

      ...this...

    • @QuikdethDeviantart
      @QuikdethDeviantart 4 роки тому +1

      That’s what he does when the camera turns off... mount tele... 🤦🏼‍♂️

  • @tomaszmazurek64
    @tomaszmazurek64 5 років тому +115

    Turning around is a good method - if you spin 360 degrees you can usually find a position in which the hum is less intense. Moving around also helps. This is most useful while recording, especially with a computer, which can be a massive source of electromagnetic noises.
    If you use pedals, changing the power supply can help a lot. I've switched from using individual wallwarts to Mooer MPS8 and the difference is huge. Part of it is unlike with most wallwarts, this one is properly grounded, part of it is that a single transformer in a proper metal shielding sends out less interference than 3 with unshielded plastic cases. Finally, since individual PSUs can float in terms of voltage in relation to each other, they can cause hum in the effects chain, even if there was none coming from the guitar. Having a single PSU deals with that too.
    Finally, a somewhat controversial option for recording is to use a noise removal plugin. Essentially, you leave a few seconds of just noise and hum at the start or end of the recording, then feed this into the plugin so that it can build a noise profile and use that profile to remove the noise and hum in a much more nuanced way then a simple gate would. I use Z-Noise by Waves and just feed it a signal from an amp or a distortion pedal and it works wonders. It has a huge latency though, so it's unusable in live situations.

    • @TomGrubbe
      @TomGrubbe Рік тому +3

      I thought this was a joke comment at first "...if you spin 360 degrees..." but it works. The advice on the PSU and Z-Noise plugin are also very useful. Thank you!

  • @MikeLee-lg5vq
    @MikeLee-lg5vq 5 років тому +486

    Wow. That's more Teles on the wall than at many music stores. 😀

    • @russellesimonetta3835
      @russellesimonetta3835 5 років тому +37

      Different colors create different sounds!blue is for blues, surf green is for ventures, black is for nirvana or angsty music, red is for anarchy rock ect.

    • @russellesimonetta3835
      @russellesimonetta3835 5 років тому +6

      @Loofasword i,m just joking. I know they all serve a different styles based on pickups.

    • @MikeLee-lg5vq
      @MikeLee-lg5vq 5 років тому +5

      @@russellesimonetta3835 If having a different color guitar in your hands makes you play it differently, it actually does create different sounds! Can't deny that! 😄

    • @martijnvandenakker803
      @martijnvandenakker803 5 років тому +1

      Russell E Simonetta ...And woods...

    • @error404m
      @error404m 5 років тому +2

      I have a 97 Japanese Jaguar. Very very well shielded, and hardly hums at all.

  • @denis_kleshchev
    @denis_kleshchev 4 роки тому +286

    I could hear AM radio out of my single coils when it existed. Now they turned off all AM radios in Russia and all I hear is 50 Hz hum

    • @stanksandwich8383
      @stanksandwich8383 4 роки тому +11

      bring back AM radio !

    • @euphority_delay7978
      @euphority_delay7978 3 роки тому +5

      А мне однажды было слышно, как кто-то слушает русскую народную музыку, я не ожидала этого.

    • @punkisinthedetails1470
      @punkisinthedetails1470 3 роки тому +3

      Wow. You must be a big deal over there.

    • @gothxm
      @gothxm 3 роки тому

      @@punkisinthedetails1470 lol wut

    • @punkisinthedetails1470
      @punkisinthedetails1470 3 роки тому +1

      @@gothxm hehe hey Mujushin. I don't remember the exact angle of the joke. I think I was suggesting that the person was physically able to harness or receive radio signals, as a joke. Kind of like a superpower. When the person is obviously referring to their actual radio but their comment made it sound otherwise.

  • @onefatstratcat
    @onefatstratcat 5 років тому +1434

    Why does your guitar hum?
    It doesn't know the words :)

  • @alexbowman7582
    @alexbowman7582 5 років тому +447

    In the UK we do not have a problem with 60Hz buzz. We do have a problem with 50Hz buzz.

    • @mr.purple250
      @mr.purple250 5 років тому +8

      Alex Bowman lmao

    • @roypalfrey169
      @roypalfrey169 5 років тому +57

      And anyone who has experience of 70 cycle hum will tell you; The hum isn't as good as it used to be.

    • @samfosdick9874
      @samfosdick9874 5 років тому +70

      In Soviet Union guitar buzz you..

    • @lucasaltamirano1354
      @lucasaltamirano1354 5 років тому +3

      Ohh. Sorry for live in America with 50hz. Sucker

    • @PhuVet
      @PhuVet 5 років тому +23

      Goofy 240V is even worse I bet. There is a push here in the US to cut the amount of 120v lines running in houses because most things in the households really run off of 12v or less. Edison screwed us over all those years. The newest thing people are doing is installing big transformers in their houses to drop the voltage to 12v so they can run almost everything on solar. No stupid wall warts or transformer boxes on electronics. Imagine that, Tesla was right all along.

  • @MonsieurVersatile
    @MonsieurVersatile 5 років тому +301

    Self-adhesive copper tape (anti-snail tape) throughout the pickup cavities and routing cavities, and on scratch plate, all joined up, wire from tape to back of volume pot. Done. Costs virtually nothing and is amazingly effective. Takes 20 minutes and transforms your guitar.

    • @mihaiiatan6720
      @mihaiiatan6720 5 років тому +11

      Agree. My Fender strat has all the cavities (vibrato one too), tapped with copper foil. The hum it's just at the same level as for the humbucker. I can go even further with the statement, my Washburn has more background noise when i don't touch the strings, than my Strat.

    • @ironkiko
      @ironkiko 5 років тому

      Hugelongjohns Awesome

    • @ironkiko
      @ironkiko 5 років тому

      Mihai Iatan Very cool

    • @1thess523
      @1thess523 5 років тому +1

      @@mihaiiatan6720 did you ground the cavities together?

    • @mihaiiatan6720
      @mihaiiatan6720 5 років тому +1

      @@1thess523 yes, connected with the pickguard too.

  • @billdollar7011
    @billdollar7011 5 років тому +25

    I was reading this week about a new way of winding a single coil that's completely silent. This is genius! You wind the first 3 magnets fully and then go on to the remaining 3 magnets and wind them in a reverse direction....TA RAAA! ....silence...

    • @carlwilson4375
      @carlwilson4375 5 років тому +7

      Leo Fender did this in the 1950’s with the P Bass, and later with the G&L Comanche.

    • @bacicinvatteneaca
      @bacicinvatteneaca 5 років тому +5

      That's just a humbucker.

    • @bacicinvatteneaca
      @bacicinvatteneaca 5 років тому +2

      Also, that's what "noiseless single coils" means in his list. They're the in-line split coil humbuckers you're talking about.

    • @infectionsman
      @infectionsman 5 років тому +2

      That doesnt work, it creates a soft spot between the coils, if you bend over it it makes a horrible sound. The coils have to be set apart, like in the G&L Z-coil pickups

  • @DarrellBraunGuitar
    @DarrellBraunGuitar  5 років тому +199

    As a HUGE single coil fan this is a subject near and dear to my heart!
    If you guys have any favourite noise reduction or gate pedals post them below :)

    • @maxo.2312
      @maxo.2312 5 років тому +4

      MXR Smart Gate :)

    • @Meiji1868
      @Meiji1868 5 років тому +10

      Dryer sheet for the pickguard static. Got my tele shielded, but it was pickguard static!

    • @junkyardconnection
      @junkyardconnection 5 років тому +4

      What do you think about a parallel wired humbucker? I did the P-Rails wiring to a set of Seymour Duncan Pearly Gates and found that running the pup in parallel gave me a very similar sound to the tapped humbucker. Minus the 60 cycle hum, of course.

    • @junkyardconnection
      @junkyardconnection 5 років тому +3

      Oh, and I use a modeling amp, so my gate is built in.

    • @Ripprock1
      @Ripprock1 5 років тому +6

      Zexcoil pups

  • @youngslump8735
    @youngslump8735 4 роки тому +132

    i really dont know why but something tells me Darrel really likes Teles.

    • @avinandandey6418
      @avinandandey6418 4 роки тому +5

      We all love teles

    • @blackstormer95
      @blackstormer95 3 роки тому +4

      @@avinandandey6418 not really, Strat gang all the way

    • @hathaway.1166
      @hathaway.1166 3 роки тому +3

      @@blackstormer95 Everyone loves the strat, including me, but the telecaster is for the matured mind, and you can play pretty much any kind of music with it.

  • @EXHUMEnCONSUME
    @EXHUMEnCONSUME 5 років тому +514

    If it ain't hummin', I ain't strummin'.

    • @MrMattias1991
      @MrMattias1991 5 років тому +15

      That hum is like when you were being wrapped in soft and clean blanket, fresh out of the dryer in Winter

    • @sarondiesel588
      @sarondiesel588 5 років тому +11

      Mine's a hummin' but it ain't a strummin' because I left my strings at the store I bought them from. :)

    • @clawhammer704
      @clawhammer704 4 роки тому +4

      If its humming then I'm not strumming.

  • @johnbrown4568
    @johnbrown4568 Рік тому +6

    In the 21st century most Fender guitars must be considered mostly noise generators.

  • @DanCooz323
    @DanCooz323 5 років тому +18

    I've been using the EH Silencer, with all my gain pedals in the loop, and modulation coming after. The other guitarist in my band is using a Decimator. I showed him my setup and he was blown away that he didn't have to keep stomping it on and off. Hell, he would play (thru my setup), and then we'd talk gear for a second. There were a few times he'd hit the strings and scare himself, completely forgetting that the amps were on and turned up! Those pedals make a huge difference. I've also used the Boss Noise Gate for a long time, until it was stolen. Keep the vids coming Darrell!

  • @ThomHarp
    @ThomHarp 4 роки тому +6

    I recently bought the Electro Harmonix Hum Debugger, and it's a fantastic solution. Doesn't affect the tone at all. The only issue: it has to be plugged directly into the wall with the power adapter that comes with it. Not a gate. It goes after JUST the buzz/hum and it's INCREDIBLY effective. Won't play without it now. Has 2 settings: Normal and High.

    • @johnhennessey5
      @johnhennessey5 Рік тому

      3 years later, I bet you agree the pedal changes the tone. Everyone who has it says it gives a weird ring-mod/delay effect on notes

  • @timmyv694
    @timmyv694 5 років тому +19

    I have Ibanez RC430 that uses 2 dummy coils . One in series and one in parallel to eliminate virtually all single coil hum without changing the tone. It’s pretty ingenious:) This guitar is quieter and more authentic sounding than my Fender Stratocaster with Dimarzio Area pickups in it. The best part is it’s all passive ( no batteries needed ) and I can use any single coil pickups I want with it.

    • @zaqwoodward8851
      @zaqwoodward8851 5 років тому

      TimmyV there’s a few epiphone sig models by metal guitarist Lee Malia from Bring Me the Horizon that have the dummy coils in the back. His guitars come with a humbucker in the bridge and a hum sized p90 in the neck. No buzz at all!

  • @terrainx
    @terrainx 4 роки тому +27

    There are a lot of myths about 60hz hum. In a nutshell, any electric instrument is effectively an electrical circuit thus 60hz hum (electrostatic noise) is nothing but RF interference. The only way to get rid of it is to ensure a proper electrical grounding of the circuit.
    Electric guitar circuit is basically conformed by the pickups + cable + amplifier, the amplifier should have a metal chassis which is grounded internally . The important thing here is to make sure your amplifier is electrically grounded when you plug it to the power line. This ensures the RF interference bleeds to ground and is not amplified by your amp's circuit.
    Shielding the interior of the guitar's body and the back of the pickguard can help to reduce the hum however only grounding the amp can get rid of the hum.
    If you choose to shield the interior of the guitar's body and back of the pickguard, it is very important that you make sure you ground it to the output's jack ground terminal and not to the tremolo bridge. Fail to do this and in case of an electrical discharge you might get a very unpleasant electrical shock. In some cases this might even be life threatening.

    • @apotato9227
      @apotato9227 4 роки тому +2

      Terrain So does that mean i should place my amp on the ground? i usually always place it on my bed

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc 4 роки тому +1

      Running two wires in parallel (one to the bridge and one to the cavity) versus running one wire in serial (touching the cavity and continuing on to the bridge) is not going to make a significant difference in how hard you get zapped if things go horribly wrong. Prevention must be done elsewhere, and it starts with keeping your amplifier in good repair and properly wired. Better still, run through an opto-isolator so there isn't a high voltage anywhere on the guitar side of the circuit -- although this won't stop you from getting zapped by directly touching an amplifier with the chassis tied to live.

    • @terrainx
      @terrainx 3 роки тому +1

      @@apotato9227 No, grounding refers to electrical grounding which means the outlet and the house/building electrical installation should be correctly grounded for safety. In practice, if this is done correctly, this means your amp should not buzz when it is on. In case you want to verify your house/building electrical installation is correctly grounded, only a certified electrician should perform that task.

  • @SeemsLikeSomething
    @SeemsLikeSomething 5 років тому +11

    I’d suggest using the gate as the very last solution. It’s the most obstructive method to your sound. First step, use high quality cables! Second, check the other electronics in the area and where their magnetic fields are! Third, insulate your guitar’s electronic cavities with the proper copper shielding tape (adhesive needs to be conductive), by this point you should be almost noise free. Then a gate with very low settings could certainly help. And/or hum/noise reduction if your setup has that option.

  • @Arcturian1111
    @Arcturian1111 5 років тому +110

    Also check your guitar cables too. My sons guitar sounded bad. I changed the guitar cord, it made a world of difference.

    • @geespar1
      @geespar1 5 років тому +149

      Certainly easier than changing the son 😄

    • @nightcoreunny2114
      @nightcoreunny2114 5 років тому +4

      @@geespar1 😂

    • @ifhami4122
      @ifhami4122 4 роки тому +1

      @@geespar1 lol 😂😂😂😂

    • @0Imtheslime0
      @0Imtheslime0 4 роки тому +1

      ​@@geespar1 Killed it... :):)

    • @jairocabrales5139
      @jairocabrales5139 3 роки тому +1

      @@geespar1 SAVAGE !!!! LMAO !!

  • @donniebradley9687
    @donniebradley9687 4 роки тому +11

    Boss NS-2. Awesome pedal for even the simplest of feedback. Has a great "decay" range to get short chops or nearly unrestricted sustain.. threshold has nice range to adjust the strength of gate up front. I highly recommend it!

  • @starr_shine3060
    @starr_shine3060 5 років тому +18

    My advice is 1. shield the guitar properly (create a Farriday cage by making sure all shielding is touching and grounded ) 2. don't play under florescent lights. Play by candle light if you have to. 3. Unplug unneeded electrical appliances (including wifi devices). 4. Try plugging your Amp into different outlets, because sometimes a high amperage appliance can create line noise on all outlets running on that breaker (of course this problem effects humbuckers too)

    • @RjBenjamin353
      @RjBenjamin353 Рік тому

      😂😂😂😂

    • @LandOffConfusion
      @LandOffConfusion 8 місяців тому

      I plugged my amp to another outlet and boom. Hum was mostly gone Ty

  • @Evan-tj1te
    @Evan-tj1te 5 років тому +3

    Eating lunch, watching Darrell, how could life get any better ?

    • @stephenhookings1985
      @stephenhookings1985 5 років тому +1

      The doorbell rings and another new guitar is delivered - a free gift?? Just saying:-)

  • @annihilator7787
    @annihilator7787 4 роки тому

    this is so unfair. i just typed a fresh search and still found this posted by you. 👌 man please live a thousand years.

  • @MartinCliffe
    @MartinCliffe 5 років тому +17

    I've tried a number of noise gate / reduction pedals over the years... Boss, MXR, ISP... the MXR Smart Gate is the best I've used. But the Suhr SSCII system built into my red Suhr is a much more effective solution :) No battery needed unless you're using the S90s (P90 style) too.

  • @Macula223
    @Macula223 Рік тому

    Thank you very much. Your video helped me out a lot to understand what was going on, I'm a bit of a DIY electrician, and I kind of figured some of it not all was due to the ground, but I still don't understand why the companies just haven't overcome this overall, it's dirty, electricity! And in this day and age, they should've overcome that, that kind of integrity is passed on to the consumer and we really shouldn't have to deal with that! Nobody wants to walk around with a pebble in the shoe and you've already figured out. All you have to do is take it out! I want to thank you very much for taking the time out to make your video and explain everything, keep up the good work a lot of us depend upon people like you!

  • @LamppostInTheWoods
    @LamppostInTheWoods 5 років тому +4

    I have Lace Sensors… when in single coil, no noise. And, they truly can sing. Once everything is heated up and rolling, sweet sting. Clarity is amazing, and the cello tones I can get on the lower portions of the fretboard give me whole other voice to go to.

  • @bradg2078
    @bradg2078 3 роки тому +18

    The Boss NS-2 noise gate is my favorite. Easy to use and effective. Plus, it has some unique routing options where your pedals run in a loop if creates and your guitar goes in and out. That way it can separate the guitar signal from pedal noise. Really helps with high gain setups.

  • @mktaftsr
    @mktaftsr 5 років тому +10

    Very informative, thanks for today's topic. I've agonized over 60 cycle hum for decades.

    • @segueoyuri
      @segueoyuri 5 років тому +1

      how about a humbucker? lol

  • @joseph-ow1hf
    @joseph-ow1hf 5 років тому +2

    Interesting you posted this, as I just acquired a Boss NS2 noise suppressor. It works exceptionally well at cutting out hum from vintage single coils without altering attack or killing sustain. If you hold a note, you can hear the hum start to creep in (but reduced in volume) before the gate shuts, so like most things, not perfect........but otherwise pretty great. The other thing that helps w/ pedals is a good isolated linear PS vs a cheap daisy chained switching unit, but this is more about hiss than 60 hz buzz.
    I don't play professionally, but having a rig that is now nearly silent makes me really happy. Plus, I could swear that my little 20 watt Mesa combo now has more clean headroom without all the noise being fed to the input. Could be my imagination, or confusing the noise added to signal as distortion.

  • @52Tele
    @52Tele 5 років тому +284

    As John Mayer once said, "60 cycle hum is like the guitar is breathing".

    • @RobSanx
      @RobSanx 5 років тому +134

      It's more like snoring.

    • @tallon3925
      @tallon3925 5 років тому +2

      @@RobSanx lol

    • @jaysison6987
      @jaysison6987 5 років тому +2

      Snoring. Hahahahaha

    • @yogicbeats
      @yogicbeats 4 роки тому

      @@RobSanx HAHAA

    • @Dreamdancer11
      @Dreamdancer11 4 роки тому +5

      More like breathing in your deathbed.....

  • @bills48321
    @bills48321 5 років тому +35

    Some people like the Electro-Harmonix Hum Debugger pedal. It's not a noise gate, it works differently.

    • @AGTR98
      @AGTR98 3 роки тому

      Will take a look at it, I hate noise gates.

    • @DKinMN
      @DKinMN 3 роки тому

      I bought one and it's pretty stunning. "Tone suck" is negligible, noise reduction is massive.

  • @rudiyantohalim736
    @rudiyantohalim736 5 років тому +19

    Before watching the vid and just by looking at it's title, i thought that u gonna give us tutorial on how to do EMI shielding with copper tape 😁
    Nice vids as usual sir. Thank You

    • @denniswalsh8476
      @denniswalsh8476 4 роки тому +1

      I use only StewMac's copper shielding tape. It works very well but takes some practice to install efficiently. First couple of guitars I wasted as much tape as I installed making pieces that didn't fit well enough for me, then trying again. I got better at it with time and more appropriate tools.
      Conductive adhesive (??) but I solder across any seams/joints JIC. Pickup pockets too, but these need ground wire connection led back to the control cavity's shield tape. Back of the pickguard, sure, control compartment cover, sure. These places require making a copper tab across one (two's better) screw holes (both pieces) that will connect them together when installed. Tub routes are easiest, a typical Strat is a total PIA in the body but "cheap therapy". No special tools, paper, pencils with good erasers, Sharpie, sissors, an Exacto knife, and small misc. $50 worth of the 3 widths of tape is enough for 5-8 guitars if most pieces are well cut. Actually the 1/4 wide is kind of useless. Have FUN, (I'm sure there are You-Tubes, good and not so good) demonstrating tape installation. Should have said this first but the idea is to build a copper **box** around everything but the front of the PUs. ** aka, a Faraday Cage. Your results may vary and it won't be perfectly silent, so there's that.

  • @cass2771
    @cass2771 5 років тому +1

    I have a Tele that buzzed. I painted the pickup cavity with conductive paint, and replaced the internal wire with insulated wire. Big improvement. More playable and enjoyable. I recommend this approach. Yes, ‘some (re)assembly required, but it actually addresses the problem.

  • @ArtAlienTV
    @ArtAlienTV 5 років тому +41

    I put 3 hotrails in one of my Strats. With a toggle switch for each one to go from single to humbucker. No noise. Noise Gate otherwise. 👍

    • @mynamefrank6567
      @mynamefrank6567 5 років тому

      How much did it cost for the 3?

    • @mkaali
      @mkaali 5 років тому +1

      But isn't coil split again noisy?

    • @mikesmit9770
      @mikesmit9770 5 років тому +1

      I have a strat ultra from 91 which has noiseless lace sensor gold pickups

    • @DMSProduktions
      @DMSProduktions 5 років тому +2

      Yes, split will make it noisy!

    • @doyledarby9020
      @doyledarby9020 5 років тому

      I've got the same setup preloaded pickguard from dragonfire.i love it.

  • @JustinHaglerMusic
    @JustinHaglerMusic 5 років тому +1

    A noise gate is SO HELPFUL in reducing/killing your hum. I have always used the noise gate from my Line 6 interface in every single coil tone/chain I have built and saved. Okay, with the exception of 2 or 3 saved tones without noise gate all the rest include a noise gate. Great recommendation Darrell. My Nashville Tele has the noiseless pickups and I love them!!! In my opinion if one hates or dislikes hum, the fender noiseless pickups are the way to go. Keep up all of the great work...love what you are doing here!!!

  • @ChadWork1
    @ChadWork1 5 років тому +87

    I just had an electrician come over and put my studio on it's own circuit / ground. Everything is very silent.

    • @ArmanBaig
      @ArmanBaig 3 роки тому

      How much does something like that cost? Is it invasive work?

    • @ChadWork1
      @ChadWork1 3 роки тому +1

      @@ArmanBaig That depends on your house. I have a crawl space under my house. It was like between 1-2 hrs work. It's not a big deal to do. It would be good if you talked to an electrician and told him whats happening. There is still a little bit of hum with single coils. BUT if you have a big hum going on, that can be mitigated with a new clean line with it's own ground. It made me not hate single coils LOL!

    • @ArmanBaig
      @ArmanBaig 3 роки тому

      @@ChadWork1 I have a 2 story house with attic and crawl space. My studio is on the second floor. Could I still do it?

    • @ChadWork1
      @ChadWork1 3 роки тому

      @@ArmanBaig Of course. Anything is possible. Just have an electrician come out and bit the job. It would be nice if he had some experience with studios, as in killing the hum. It may be that he just tests your lines and finds they are can be tweaked. You could call a local studio and ask if they have a recommendation for an electrician too.

    • @ArmanBaig
      @ArmanBaig 3 роки тому +3

      @@ChadWork1 awesome, thank you so much. I really appreciate it

  • @billkennedy8379
    @billkennedy8379 3 роки тому +2

    I just installed a simple dummy coil in my MIM Telecaster...big improvement. Hum/buzz is reduced to a tolerable level. The pickups aren't RWRP, so I was able to use the same dummy coil in all three switch positions by wiring it between the output of the switch and the input of the volume control. And cost $0, since I already had an old pickup to use for the dummy coil.

  • @directassault1662
    @directassault1662 5 років тому +237

    Something you didn't say: Stand the exact right direction to minimize it.

    • @squidwardstesticles5914
      @squidwardstesticles5914 5 років тому +16

      That’s only really practical when you’re recording though

    • @directassault1662
      @directassault1662 5 років тому +5

      @@squidwardstesticles5914 Except for when I've done it live...

    • @squidwardstesticles5914
      @squidwardstesticles5914 5 років тому +6

      Direct Assault you can’t really get into the performance though, cause you have to just look in one direction the whole time

    • @ASSman864
      @ASSman864 5 років тому +18

      You say that as if anyone is going to take squidwards testicles serious

    • @samueljett7807
      @samueljett7807 5 років тому +16

      I figured this out by accident lol. I dropped my pick so I turned to get it and behold! All noise disappeared.

  • @keithling417
    @keithling417 5 років тому +5

    I think gating is by far the answer most pros use, even if they play the high end single coils. One point I would make is that the gating will also change the way you play. It actually helps you become more subtle with left hand pressure. It also makes the rhythm riffs sound more punchy, provided the player has the gate dialed in right and gets used to it.

  • @ArielsSmartyPants
    @ArielsSmartyPants 5 років тому +124

    Embrace the hum. Favorite album: Jimi Hendrix - Blues, tons of hum on almost every song, does it bother me? No, it's part of the tunes to my ears now :)

    • @PhuVet
      @PhuVet 5 років тому +7

      I thought his was mainly his pedals though....they dont seem like 60hz buzz. More along the lines of an amplified feedback loop.

    • @orchidmalevolence9726
      @orchidmalevolence9726 3 роки тому

      It's just a sound coming from his fuzz pedal

  • @svart42
    @svart42 5 років тому +77

    Why does expensive Fender USA guitars don't come with paint or copper/aluminum foil out of the box?

    • @VictorVonBelmont
      @VictorVonBelmont 5 років тому +24

      Some of them do, but only the realy high en models. Also most Gibsons come without any kind of cavity shielding. I work as a guitar tech and it's funny because sometimes $400 Asian made guitars come with better shielding.

    • @CsykKrit
      @CsykKrit 5 років тому +41

      You're paying for a name not innovation.

    • @stankfanger1366
      @stankfanger1366 5 років тому +1

      The ones that don't have copper tape shielding will either have dark gray conductive paint lining the cavity or they'll have shielded wiring.

    • @nunyabeezwax2059
      @nunyabeezwax2059 4 роки тому +2

      They only add it because it's cheaper than convincing everyone that it doesn't actually work.

    • @tatoler38
      @tatoler38 4 роки тому +1

      Maybe they don't use shielding because there are using humbuckers and/or noiseless single coils.

  • @carlosmarques8380
    @carlosmarques8380 5 років тому +9

    You can shield the pickup cavities and make the ground wire go to the strings so that your body absorbs all the static, but people often forget about the amp, it needs to have a ground conection, your house sure must have one (a copper rod burryed in the ground) but the plug you have on the wall may not have the ground part conected for various reasons (lazynesis a common reason, many people just connect the red and black and ignore the green\yellow because it serves little to no purpose, but it's important for this) so make sure it has, it makes a huge difference, my guitar has humbuckers and when i use it conected to a solar inverter that has no ground it buzzes a lot, but when i use with normal energy it's perfectly silent, also make sure that if you are using a extention cord (or a triple one) , make sure its all stretched and that it has a ground pin in the plugs, at home i have some that only have the holes for the plug but not the metal part that is supossed to make the ground for the amp and it's kinda common in many cheap extensions, the ground conection is really important and easy to neglect, i noticed this because the amp would buzz even with the guitar cable disconnected :v

    • @ondrejkauzal8969
      @ondrejkauzal8969 2 роки тому

      Where the heck do tou live that it is common not to have the yellowgreen cable not connected to the whole house??? Just the black and red (and by red we in Europe mean blue, red is for DC voltage). This is just totally crazy. The yellowgreen does have purpose, it saves lives!

  • @daviddequasie6816
    @daviddequasie6816 5 років тому +2

    After trying everything, I got an Electro Harmonix Hum Debugger. It is not a gate or a notch filter. I don't know how it works but it solved the problem on a steady gig that I had which was plagued by neon lights.

  • @divusaugstus
    @divusaugstus 3 роки тому +8

    I have discovered with my guitars that playing with guitar volume turned down between 5 and 7 reduces hum and I feel like my tone is much better. Sharper and less compressed and more nuanced.

  • @Escapism7133
    @Escapism7133 5 років тому +2

    TC Electronic Sentry. Best gate I've tried so far. Definitely not a simple threshold gate. You run your dirt pedals through the loop and set the gate exactly how you want it via threshold, decay, and damp controls (it also has a tone print option which allows you to edit various parameters of the gate on their software and save those settings). Your clean signal stays intact and your buzz/hum from the dirt pedals run through the gate.

  • @RodneyWallaceDynamoC
    @RodneyWallaceDynamoC 5 років тому +6

    A perfect solution for me is a plugin called Noise repellent. It eliminates noise in realtime, introduces a bit of latency but very little and it doesn't interfere on your tone or playing. Awesome.

  • @quicksilverstrom
    @quicksilverstrom 5 років тому

    I love how you let your viewers form their own opinion and place the facts in from of them in a clear concise manner. Thanks a lot...

  • @Danny-el8ww
    @Danny-el8ww 5 років тому +10

    those noiseless pickups were so good my soundcard failed and i couldnt even hear the video LMAO

  • @Michael-hp2pe
    @Michael-hp2pe 5 років тому +1

    Darrell, your videos are the best man. If there is a guitar topic I'm thinking of and want to research, you always seem to have covered it. Plus, you aren't lazy, you always link to related stuff in annotations or in the video description. Keep up the great work man!

  • @jefjahn247
    @jefjahn247 5 років тому +39

    What a "Tele" of a day! Darrell, did you intentionally fill the wall with Teles, and rock that T-shirt to match? LOL ... Thank You for these fast and easy fix solutions!

  • @nikkoberserker
    @nikkoberserker 4 роки тому +1

    Hi darrell ,i know it's a old video ,but i find an other solution for the noise cancelling ,it's a dummy coil , you just solder an single coil pickup with no magnet and no plot between the switch and the volume pot (the hot wire) and that's all ! it's very effective ! try it with old spare single coil of china .take care.

    • @FCValle
      @FCValle 2 роки тому

      THIS! A million times this!

  • @schreds8882
    @schreds8882 5 років тому +25

    I've been using Electro-Harmonix Hum Debugger for a few years now. Works well.

    • @BongEyedBastard
      @BongEyedBastard 5 років тому +3

      Same, but it's very tempramental about where it sits in the FX chain.

    • @schreds8882
      @schreds8882 5 років тому +6

      @@BongEyedBastard Yes, it has to be first and it's not a noise gate for pedals. It's for cancelling the 60 hum only. If you're looking to cut pedal noise, this isn't the tool to use.

    • @schreds8882
      @schreds8882 5 років тому

      @Zach Isley I'm going to look at that. An fx loop could be handy. Thanks. 😀

  • @davidtyler3116
    @davidtyler3116 4 роки тому +2

    Thanks, my Tele is used for 40% of my live songs! I think the gate is best for me. Great job DBG!

  • @monkymonk6
    @monkymonk6 5 років тому +6

    Shielding paint worked wonders on my MIM Tele. Virtually no hum, even under fluorescent lighting.

  • @stevelaferney3579
    @stevelaferney3579 2 роки тому

    Thanks, finally proof that someone else shows the hum I’m hearing during single coil playing.

  • @RedSnake517
    @RedSnake517 5 років тому +36

    My Boss Katana 50 has a built-in noise suppressor. Only problem is that it's only accessible in the Boss Tone Studio via USB but it works wonders once set up.

    • @rakoboy8
      @rakoboy8 5 років тому +2

      I've never plugged in my katana to my computer, once you set up the noise suppressor do you constantly have to be plugged in to use it or can you unplug it and you're all good?

    • @mikewhitfield2994
      @mikewhitfield2994 5 років тому +1

      lol I have one and did not know that. Thanks!

    • @SeemsLikeSomething
      @SeemsLikeSomething 5 років тому +1

      rakoboy8
      Hey as far as I’m aware, you can save the setting into any of the eight channels available to the 100w or any of the four on the 50w. It would have to be done initially through the Tone Studio software then you’re good to unplug and go.

    • @rakoboy8
      @rakoboy8 5 років тому

      @@SeemsLikeSomething sweet, thanks dude

    • @SeemsLikeSomething
      @SeemsLikeSomething 5 років тому +2

      rakoboy8
      No worries and by the way, not sure if you know, but the Katana has been getting a lot of firmware updates! If you go to the boss website and check downloads under the Katana model you own, you can get the latest firmware, driver and tone studio. Keeping that up to date is gonna be VERY helpful! Especially if you only have the version 1 software because they doubled the channels that you can use in an update!! Cheers and good luck 😉

  • @Craig_Fussell
    @Craig_Fussell 5 років тому +2

    For me...Environmental: stay away from fluorescent lighting. The ballasts cause a ton of noise. Gear without mods: Noise gates for sure (as you mentioned), and if you’re using pedals, check each one...sometimes they cause noise...it’s not always 60 cycle. Put up with it: some times it’s kinda cool...kinda lets you and the listeners know something awesome is coming LOL! 😉🎸

  • @SixSilverStrings1992
    @SixSilverStrings1992 4 роки тому +8

    The quality of your cables will also make a hugh difference (clean or overdrive) especially if you are using multiple pedals. Quality cables are a better investment than a new pedal on a noisy pedalboard!

    • @xdoctorblindx
      @xdoctorblindx 4 роки тому +4

      Quality cables can't eliminate 60-cycle hum; they only prevent additional noise from being introduced into the signal path.

  • @razmazerz
    @razmazerz 5 років тому +1

    I own Fender Jaguar which has pair of single coil pickup. For offsets guitarist like me, I would recommend to use a 'Buzz Stop' . It's like a small piece hardware that screwed between your bridge and tremolo to eliminate buzzing noise.

  • @Melkor0410
    @Melkor0410 3 роки тому +26

    There is a different between 60 cycle hum and ground noise. Most guitars have problem with ground. 60 cycle hum can be solved super easily by using humbuckers, noise gates or stacked noiseless single coils and it goes on. While ground noise until now still has its debates on what is the best way to ground a guitar other then copper shielding

    • @Joe93819
      @Joe93819 2 роки тому +1

      But I don’t have no money to spend on pickups or pedals

    • @Megas_Alexandros
      @Megas_Alexandros 2 роки тому

      Doesn't noise gates kill your sustain

    • @ramspencer5492
      @ramspencer5492 2 роки тому

      Humbuckers have a very different sound.... Which I do like, but it's not a replacement for a single coil sound. It's a different sound. You're right about grounding issues.....I have guitar with some that I need to sort out....

    • @ramspencer5492
      @ramspencer5492 2 роки тому

      @@Megas_Alexandros not the overall sustain vibe, in normal playing when set well..... But on really long notes.... Yes it does

  • @josephrogers9796
    @josephrogers9796 3 місяці тому

    I recently rebuilt my parts caster Stratocaster with the Eric Clapton mod. The mod is the TBX and Mid Range boost. I lined the electronics cavity with copper foil. I grounded the volume pot to the body and the Bridge also to the volume pot. Another thing I did was I put
    together a AC receptacle. I put a silicon diode and a resistor inline on the ground wire. I have a vacuum tube amplifier that I play my guitar thru. I have zero 60 cycle hum even I raise the volume or the gain. It is a bit of work to solve the problem but well worth it.

  • @TheMyndsurfer
    @TheMyndsurfer 4 роки тому +3

    Zoom's G1on and G1Xon multi effects pedal have a filter called a ZNR. (zoom noise reduction) Brilliant!! Most of the effects in this pedal are really digital sounding and I dont like them particularly, BUT, put the ZNR on and watch the hum disappear. Worth the price (A$100 or so) just for this effect.

  • @DenisAhmet
    @DenisAhmet 5 років тому +1

    When I built a Tele kit guitar recently, I used Copper shielding tape in all cavities and pick guard plus twisted the earth and hot wire as tight as possible - I think I saw this tip on UA-cam - It made huge difference. I'm no expert, but it's worth a go considering how cheap the tape is and nothing for twisting the wires. I also came across some device you can plug in to eliminate the hum, I think it was not cheap nor if it was all hype, the video I saw came across as if it eliminated the hum all together? Has anyone had experience with it? Keep up the great work Darrell, your are an inspiration....

  • @spartan8390
    @spartan8390 4 роки тому +6

    The Decimator II is always a good choice. However, my experience has been using Mogami cables took care of the buzz. I do keep my cable ends clean as well as use a volume pedal, so I don't notice anything. The gates always seemed finicky when I played. I won't get rid of it though. Telecasters do seem to suffer the most. Good grounding, shielding, good cables, should be all set. Great video!

    • @alefty4463
      @alefty4463 Рік тому

      Gold plated, high quality cables definitely make a big difference in my experience. I like to use Fender's deluxe/pro cables.

  • @joseph-ow1hf
    @joseph-ow1hf 4 роки тому +1

    My Boss NS-2 is maybe most important pedal I have. Works great. I don't gig, but I can't stand having noise. I am a semi-pro FoH engineer so sorta picky about sound. Get the settings correct and it's pretty seamless, and doesn't color the sound tonally. It also has connections to create a 'loop' where it acts only on the noisy gain pedals (if you have them) I've goofed around w/ allowing the gating to be audible as an effect, almost like an auto volume swell if that makes any sense.

  • @slo_carry
    @slo_carry 5 років тому +38

    I use the Donner Noise Killer. It's a fairly cheap pedal on Amazon, but it gets the job done.

    • @davidkastin4240
      @davidkastin4240 5 років тому +1

      Yep. I highly recommend this pedal. Works excellent for me.

    • @draganm7823
      @draganm7823 5 років тому

      I ordered my Donner but it never arrived and they aren't replying when I asked for a refund due to not receiving the pedal.

    • @slo_carry
      @slo_carry 5 років тому +2

      @@draganm7823 Did you contact Amazon or Donner? I've never had an issue with Amazon not responding

    • @slo_carry
      @slo_carry 5 років тому +4

      @KC you're talking about a pedal that's $100 more. It should be far superior. I mentioned the Donner because not everyone has that much to drop on a pedal and for trying something out, the Donner is great. For $135 I'd personally look at Boss or TC Electronic.

    • @davidkastin4240
      @davidkastin4240 5 років тому

      @@draganm7823 Those bastards. I feel your pain. I got mine off of eBay and love it.

  • @aigor9668
    @aigor9668 5 місяців тому

    I love how the push pull coil split gives you that beautiful hum without sounding even close like a single coil :D

  • @samueljett7807
    @samueljett7807 5 років тому +13

    One thing I noticed with my strat was that if I stood perpendicular to my amp most noise disappeared. I guess it has something to do with the magnets lining up and cancelling interference?

    • @randoshus3762
      @randoshus3762 5 років тому +9

      I think you catch the hum out of phase with itself...it basically noise cancels itself.

  • @d3w4yn3
    @d3w4yn3 2 роки тому

    When you pop that battery in and out it sounds like the beginning of BOC's Godzilla! Unintended, but a cool effect!!!

  • @MichaelD8393
    @MichaelD8393 5 років тому +3

    Bonus trick/hack for killing single coil hum: If you're facing your amp head on, turn around and face away from it; it may sound stupidly simple, but it works for me. Maybe you can also try turning the amp or cab (if you're using a stack) around to face away from you.

  • @nazmoking3171
    @nazmoking3171 5 років тому +1

    Good explanation of the benefits and drawbacks of a noise gate and how it can somewhat negate your sustain and attack.

  • @liorangel7511
    @liorangel7511 5 років тому +9

    Mooer noise killer is amazing and Mooer is also a great company with a very good products so my advice to you guys is to go with the noise killer by Mooer

  • @nelsonsoucasaux2751
    @nelsonsoucasaux2751 5 років тому

    I fortunately could eliminate ALL NOISE from my Fender Strat Standard (Mexican) simply replacing the original pickups by the Fender Hot Noiseless ones. They are excellent, though considerably expensive. Later I purchased another Strat, this one a new Fender Strat Special HSS (American). But this time I'm only using the Boss Noise Suppressor NS2 Pedal, that sactisfactorily eliminates approximately some 85% of the noise, and this has been very nice to me, I'm pleased with it. Many thanks for your kind and detailed explanations, I learned several things I still didn't know. All the best !

  • @NathanMinski
    @NathanMinski 5 років тому +3

    I have a Joe Barden pickups on my Eric Clapton signature Strat. They are quiet in every volume and position.
    That`s tree pickups are Mini Humbeckers , but thay sunds 95 % singel coil . This is the perfect solution .
    All the best to everybody .

  • @Mike28625
    @Mike28625 3 роки тому +1

    I lowered the pickups on my squier strat to within about a centimeter of the pickguard and that did a great job killing the hum.

  • @emobutpoofy
    @emobutpoofy 5 років тому +10

    The ISP Decimator II is the best thing ever.

  • @andifaulkner2171
    @andifaulkner2171 5 років тому +1

    I use a battery amp (Yamaha THR10) it has a 1/4 inch headphone jack which I connect to main amp or straight to mixer. This isolated the guitar from mains which is the source of the hum. It also allows use of FX and EQ
    On the THR.

  • @adielricci
    @adielricci 4 роки тому +5

    Sometimes we can achieve great single coil sounds from humbuckers wired in parallel, with no 60 cycle hum whatsoever. I have some guitars wired like that.

  • @MrVyrtuoso
    @MrVyrtuoso 5 років тому

    One thing I do on DAWs is to apply a multi-band compressor set at a high threshold with no make-up gain to squash or cut out 60Hz and below. Live I tend to use a hi-pass filter EQ band at 60Hz or as close as the EQ lets me get. Either one inserted before the gate effectively attenuates the hum's fundamental so that the gate can be set to a lower closing threshold, but this obviously thins out the sound over pitches B1 and lower. In a mix setting, guitars would probably be cut at 120Hz anyway to give room for the bass.

  • @ColeRambaldi
    @ColeRambaldi 3 роки тому +5

    I love listening radio on my single coils.

  • @kencohagen4967
    @kencohagen4967 5 років тому

    I use an MXR smart gate. Rockman has an awesome Smart Gate. I believe the Rockman version, invented by Tom Scholz, was copied by MXR when the patents were sold to Dunlop. I may be wrong, but I believe that's how MXR got a hold of them. I also have two cheap Talent Noise Gates that I bought from Parts Express, dirt cheap. I'll use the MXR gate after my dirt pedals, ahead of the amp. Then when I split off the signal from one amp into the second via the effects loop as I'm running this rig in stereo, I run the two cheaper gate just before the effects return. Good luck!

  • @chopslamar6092
    @chopslamar6092 5 років тому +3

    TC Electronics Sentry! Amazing gate pedal with a loop for your noisier peddles.

  • @robsantorobass
    @robsantorobass 4 роки тому

    Very helpful! Thank you!
    I’m a bassist and usually my basses I have have hummbuckers in them but I have gotten a bass with hummbuckers but has the option to go single coil for both the neck and bridge pickups and at first I was just experimenting with having the option to go single coil or hummbucker and didn’t notice it right away because I was still experimenting with it and adjusted my tone knob accordingly I noticed this buzz coming from it. But when I’d switch it to just hummbuckers for both pickups the noise went away completely. At first thought it was a cable or my amp then found out it was just the single coil settings. Glad I found out that this is a common occurrence and not something actually wrong/broken.

  • @JohannesLabusch
    @JohannesLabusch 5 років тому +6

    I taught myself to do the shielding right (make a Faraday cage), and I hated every minute of it. I hated cutting my fingers with the copper foil, I hated having to learn how to solder ground wires to potentiometers, which seemed to take forever. But if you do it correctly, it actually IS a good solution. The best in my opinion.

  • @randywhitaker8828
    @randywhitaker8828 5 років тому +1

    Sometimes I just like listening to you play. Your a great player

  • @vicenteriquelme7528
    @vicenteriquelme7528 4 роки тому +17

    10:24 I felt kind of intimidated by that look. That soul eating look.

    • @jacksonricebreadman240
      @jacksonricebreadman240 4 роки тому +7

      Aervik that is the face my microwave see’s when I am making microwaveable Mac and cheese at 4:17am while my parents are sleeping

  • @hrvojebass8945
    @hrvojebass8945 2 роки тому

    My answer on this is Lace Sensor pickups-Holly Grail for Stratocaster and absolute noiselles Alumatone!..must try!!

  • @alexdjents6145
    @alexdjents6145 4 роки тому +123

    Why am I watching this I don’t even own a guitar with single coils

    • @rentaspoon219
      @rentaspoon219 4 роки тому +20

      Because you will one day

    • @adamsalazar8214
      @adamsalazar8214 4 роки тому +11

      Obviously you are a closeted single-coiler waiting to break out of your shell.

    • @elsonh1913
      @elsonh1913 4 роки тому +1

      Makes me wanna get Jimmy’s dragontelecaster hahaha

    • @spartan8390
      @spartan8390 4 роки тому

      Because you appreciate knowledge.

    • @Dukerdr
      @Dukerdr 3 роки тому +1

      @@spartan8390 That must be why I'm here...I don't even own a guitar (or play).

  • @kevincourcey813
    @kevincourcey813 5 років тому

    Holy Crap Darrell! This video just made me realize why Fender put the freaking strat volume knob practically on top of the bridge pickup. Because they knew you'd be constantly having to roll the volume down to control the hum! Geesh. You'd think they would have tackled that problem right away.

    • @infectionsman
      @infectionsman 5 років тому

      At that time the humbucker hadnt been invented yet. For example the Gibsons had even noisier p-90 pickups. Fender was just being smart putting the volume where the players can easily reach it. Besides, people didnt play with much gain until the late 60s. There is no other guitar that you can control the volume so effortlessly. Yngwie Malmsteen style volume swells with the pinky are prettty much impossible without a strat.

    • @kevincourcey813
      @kevincourcey813 5 років тому

      @@infectionsman Good history lesson, thanks.

  • @SkogliJotunn
    @SkogliJotunn 5 років тому +6

    The Sentry noise Gate some TC electronic is incredible.
    Kind of hard to explain but you can go into the toneprint editor. And tweak it VERY SPECIFICALLY, for your specific rig. That is the only gate that has this option.
    OUTSTANDING

  • @hanomag251
    @hanomag251 5 років тому +2

    Good to know that there are solutions. Now, you need to do a video about setting the gate. I have an Helix but dont know nothing about setting the gate.

  • @csehszlovakze
    @csehszlovakze 3 роки тому +3

    this was really informative! now I'm off to find a good noise gate for my Cort strat clone.

  • @SamGlasser
    @SamGlasser 4 роки тому

    I just did a complete change out of all the electronics on my strat. In doing so I added some pickups with a higher output level. In any of the positions where a single pickup was selected, I got lots of hummmm.
    In the process of updating my gear I picked up a Shure wireless system, which in the process of using I noticed that if I walked away from my amp and turned my back to it, the hum went away. Not sure what it would do if I was connected with a cord. So distance and some new gear can be a great solution. And in case anyone was wondering the Shure works great! The line 6 G10, not so much. Been there, done that!

    • @hhattingh
      @hhattingh 4 роки тому

      Glad to hear there is hole out there. Have you ever tried the noise vanceling backplate systems?

  • @trevorgwelch7412
    @trevorgwelch7412 5 років тому +4

    Thank You For Your Intelligent Guitar Reviews . 🇨🇦

  • @MosriteCharlie
    @MosriteCharlie Рік тому

    Back in '68, My rig was a Mosrite guitar with single coils a Fender Deluxe Reverb amp with a twin 12 Jensen home-made speaker cabinet. My amp had a reverse polarity switch on the back which newer models lack, that would go a long way in removing hum. This is before 3 prong outlets became standard.

  • @kuitaristi3003
    @kuitaristi3003 5 років тому +25

    I think too that hum is part of the magic, the vintage sound from 60's and 70's.

    • @malcolmhardwick4258
      @malcolmhardwick4258 5 років тому +6

      Kuitaristi turn a negative into a positive. I just ignore and or don't get too worried about a bit of hum.

    • @PhuVet
      @PhuVet 5 років тому +3

      I guess we should add an open ground too so you get the hell knocked out of you to fully enjoy the 60s vintage feel.

  • @PeterDad60
    @PeterDad60 5 років тому

    I have found from ownership experience that my made in Indonesia Fender Affinity Telecaster is essentially my best and favorite electric guitar out of 17 others. I place it above or at least equal to my $1,999 Gibson 2017 SG STD. HP! I love my Telecaster and it allows me to play really well, it does not prevent me from getting the tones and notes that I am trying to play. It's not working against me in any way. In fact it's working rather well for me.
    I paid $249 Brand new over at Sweetwater about 1 - 1/2 years ago. For that price I also received a Fender Frontman 15G Guitar Amplifier (which is damn good, only lacks reverb), a Fender instrument cable, a Fender Guitar strap, a Fender electronic tuner (it's my best tuner and never lets me down) and a Fender Gig bag! Wow! What a deal! My Telecaster has the skunk stripe down the back of the ("Maple") neck and has the string through body with steel grommets in the back, it also has six (6) individual saddles and I can get Intonation absolutely perfectly. The pups are clear and silent and strong. The knogs work perfectly. The neck is without fault, no overhanging frets and it's even "Rolled" which I know that Darrell loves. In all honesty it arrived with one fret, the 3rd fret on the hi "E" string a little high which was causing a very slight buzz. I can't tolerate any fret buzz so with just a little work with a quality file the problem disappeared.
    This one Telecaster all by itself has made up for all the difficult (in comparison) to play guitars that I have and I have 17. I absolutely play my Telecaster more than any other instrument. It can do any style of music. Jazz, Rock, Blues, Country Shoe Gaze. I can even make it sound like my Full Hollwbody Guild A-150 Savoy that has Flat-wounds. I finally got LUCKY! I am a Telecaster man now. Oh and the body is not all that heavy and it is a very comfortable shape and size, not too thick. I did file/sand the top and bottom corner (near where it makes contact with my body) down just a little when I saw others doing that. It makes it more comfortable but in truth it's not all that much more comfortable so I recommend not doing that. It's the one time that I followed a trend. I figures so many people are doing it, so it must really make a difference. Yes it does but I would not do i again if I had it to do over again.
    If you want a great electric guitar I recommend Leo Fenders Telecaster. Spend as much or as little cash as you want. It's a simple guitar that is close to perfection and is very tough and resilient to damage, so once you own one you shall understand what I mean and why I wrote so much about it here.
    Last thing, the tone is great and very adjustable. It really can do all styles of music. Small adjustments of the knobs and also using the 3-way switch and volume allows for tasty tone and it allows you to get different shades of your tasty tone with small changes. Honestly the tone capabilities is beyond the reach of every other of my 17 electric guitars. I think that's really why I love my Telecaster so much. I can make small adjustment as I play and this allows me to keep in the mood, to be able to make the tones that I am feeling. You have all seen great guitarists making minor adjustments using the knobs and 3-way (or 5-way) switches while they play. Once you find yourself doing this, trust me you are now an advanced player.
    -Peter

  • @heavenlyavenger
    @heavenlyavenger 4 роки тому +9

    I finally understand why and how the humbucker was born. Shouldn't it be called humbuster? lol

    • @bryantherocker
      @bryantherocker 4 роки тому

      Wear a Tshirt with the word HUM on the front, Ride a big angry wild horse, and you will know what I mean

  • @nevillegreg1
    @nevillegreg1 5 років тому

    TC Electronics Sentury noise gate. Very good, easy to use and easy to dial in the settings so not to lose your tone. It also has a 3 position switch to address different kinds of hum/noise. I bought it and to trial it out once I got home, I just plugged it into the front of my chain (front of pedal board). It worked so well that that is where it now lives (just sits on the floor next to my pedal board). I plug my wireless receiver into the input. I turn it on when using my Yamaha 501T which has P90s and when using 'seriously gained' overdrive on other guitars, including my Fender Tele Elite - even though it is fitted with noiseless pickups.