travist
Rookie Solder Flinger
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Post by travist on May 21, 2014 13:48:47 GMT -5
Ok maybe that was too much info. I bought a push-pull pot, but when it showed up it turned out to be a dual pot. I'm hoping some experienced people could tell me what I could do with this. Below are details. Thanks! Spec sheet
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Post by newey on May 22, 2014 5:37:29 GMT -5
travist-
Hello and Welcome to G-Nutz2!
We've had some discussions about this past recently. You are correct, it is a dual-gang pot with a DPDT push/pull switch attached.
It has a single shaft which rotates both pots. As with all P/P pots, the switch is totally separate from the pots, unless you wire the two together.
The P/P switch can be used for many things, as with any P/P switch. You can certainly use the switch to switch the piezo in/out, but since it's a two-position switch, you won't be able to use it to have the piezo by itself and in conjunction with the mag pups both (if one position of the P/P is "piezo off", the other can be either "piezo alone" or "piezo with mags", it can't be both at once).
The dual gang pot can indeed be wired so as to be a volume pot in one position, and a tone pot when pulled up. Probably the most common use for the dual-gang pot is as a master tone control when using dual volume pots. If a regular pot is used for a master tone after two volume controls, there is interaction between the pots. Using the duallie allows each pickup to have its own tone pot, they're just mounted on one shaft. The wiring is then done like any LP/SG style guitar having two vols and two tone pots.
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travist
Rookie Solder Flinger
Posts: 11
Likes: 0
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Post by travist on May 22, 2014 15:27:40 GMT -5
Thanks Newey! I tried the search function but must have not worded my query correctly.
So if I understand you correctly, though it is 2 resistors you only access one at a time depending on whether the pot is pulled up or pushed down?
I bought this pot to be a volume control and using the dpdt switch to split my bridge humbucker. To continue to do this it seems like I would need to wire both pots together as a single volume pot, otherwise when I split the coils I could only use the pot for whatever its wired for in that position. Is that correct?
Seems like I would be better served using this for another function, volume/tone for piezo or both tones for mag. and piezo, and getting a regular push-pull pot for the volume.
If anyone has any tips, tricks or other ideas I could use this dual pot for I'd be very interested.
Concerning switching between piezo and magnetic, I am using a 3 position switch for that. The push-pull pot was just for coil splitting.
Thanks again!
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Post by newey on May 22, 2014 20:37:49 GMT -5
The switch functions independently of the dual pots unless you wire them together in some fashion. You can certainly use the P/P to split the HB, and use the pot for the volume. Just leave one gang of the pot unwired, and wire the remaining gang just as any volume pot.
The two gangs of the pot are also independent of each other as well. Turning the shaft/knob simply turns both elements together. It's just two pots on a common shaft.
This is unlike blend or pan pots, which have a center detent, where rotation one way increases the resistance on one half and decreases the other, with the opposite effect when turned the other way.
Dimensionally, this particular part seems quite deep, so it would be advisable to measure your cavity depth closely to be sure that it will fit.
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Post by Runewalker on Jun 5, 2014 12:38:50 GMT -5
Yes I stumbled across this unusual dual ganged PP pot and was thrilled find it. Notified the community here: PP Dual GangedImmediately applied to a small volume control cavity with a large number of switching options here: HH CubedComments about it: - It works!
- it is the dime sized pot profile not the full quarter sized for those that prefer the large carbon tracks.
- It has a more familiar torque on the action. Many dual gang pots I have uses seem to take more significant torquing power to turn compared to standard non-ganged pots. This one "feels" more like a conventional pot. That is a minor feature, but moving between a number of guitars with different wiring it will feel more familiar to the way conventional tone pots act.
Great little part. Newey on the depth, I was concerned about that as well, but with the small pots it turned out to be not a big issue. But your alert is worth doing the measurements on before buying to make sure. If you look at the headless chassis pix in th HH cubed it has a pix of the cavity and you can visually see the difference between a full sized concentric pot (which is the same height as a full sized dual ganged pot) and this one, at least in depth within the cavity. RW
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