So now I'm also wondering if I could improve the shielding in my hollow-body guitar. It's built from the
"Rockabilly: kit by TheFretWire. The controls can go in pretty easily, via either of the HB-sized pickup holes, as the body's hollow except for a pillar under the bridge - doesn't have that long center block of a semi-hollow.
However, the body arrives completed and unshielded, so there's a risk of noise that comes from external sources other than my fingers and pick. I've taken some steps to shield the signal wires, but I'm sure I could improve it, having now read some
QTB and other Nutzy posts.
I gotta say, this guitar is surprisingly quiet already, but heck, let's see if I can get a hollow-body to be the hum-free envy of players with their lead-lined [control] cavities
! Oh yeah, while minimizing the sacrifice of high frequency tones
.
Here's more about that signal chain. I've managed to make a pretty wire-conserving layout, meaning there's little back&forth inside the guitar's body. Most easily described by pictures. Meet the
Red-Tailed Hawk:
(I sure hope that picture works; it's just a placeholder icon while I'm typing this.
Here's a Flickr hyperlink, in case).
Most of the wire is single-conductor shielded, with the shielding braid exposed. The Neck-mounted P-90 (HB-sized) came with a single conductor, shielded, jacketed wire (black). "Jacketed" means the shielding is there, but it's not visible as it's under an insulating layer (plastic). The Bridge humbucker has a 4-conductor shielded jacketed wire (also black - sorry!). The bridge wire (single, insulated wire) has a quick-disconnect terminal that connects to its counterpart, soldered to the shielding of one of the single-conductor wires.
I definitely see some possible improvements, inspired by my recent Nutzy readings:
1) I could consider
separating the shielding almost entirely from the signal return, per Nutz consensus. If I understand correctly, that means that the single-conductor wire ought to be replaced by 2-conductor. For this discussion, the white conductor will carry the "hot" signal; the black conductor will serve for the "ground" (signal return); the braid will be part of the shielding. The place where shielding and signal return are joined could be where the black conductor is connected to the output jack; aside from that, they never join.
This improvement would also include redoing the leads on the caps on the TCut and BCut controls, i.e. unsoldering the leg from the pot chassis (that's shielding, after all) and instead soldering it to the signal return path. There's probably a similar issue to be solved at the volume control, and at the rotary switch... really, wherever a signal has a connection to ground, I'm learning.
2) I could establish a physical layout that's
mindful against building loops. Applies to both signal return and shielding. As for star, in this case I'd propose a hybrid line-segment & star layout, mostly because of the physical layout of the controls. I chose to put controls for Master Vol, Master TCut and Master BCut control on the bottom half of the guitar. That makes it easy for the signal's physical path to be more or less linear there, in fact all the way to the pickup selector in the body's upper bout. So the signal, signal return and shielding can all follow this path, where they can split into a star for the rotary and pickups. The bridge ground wire joins the braid along the line, as the exception that proves the rule
The shielding layout simplicity was not by accident; I was very happy to find this combination of controls and layout, given the need to shield up.
3) I'll need to pay attention to how the conductors leave the braid, and how to minimize their unshielded exposure while also ensuring that the braid can connect to control chassis where needed.
Any tips? How do I even say the above better? "Conductor leads entering/exiting braided shielding"?
4) I could improve the
shielding gloves that I've put over the controls (
photo). Essentially, on each control, I electrical-taped over the leads and jumpers for insulation from the shield; then I used copper tape with conductive adhesive to wrap - almost completely - the control. The tape is stuck to the wire braiding and to the control chassis. Even the holes in the chassis are covered with shielding this way. Quick check with multimeter shows connectivity throughout. So, why improve? Well, it's a real pain to peel in case of update/repair. I have some ideas to make it easier to open/close as needed. I'll get too wordy here; when I actually redo it, I'll post. Note: I already had to redo the rotary switch, when I noticed that it wouldn't turn; I'd taped the wafer in place with the electrical tape. I had to rip off the shielding and redo it, which I did hastily. But,
anyone see problems resulting from encasing the control like this?
5)
Eddy currents... um, those are magnetic eddy currents, right? So in a discussion about shielding, eddy currents shouldn't enter except where shielding of the pickups is in question, like in
this PG post). I ask this question so that I can feel comfortable when I more or less completely enclose my signal chain (and, incidentally, signal return) in braid & foil without gaps, except around the pickups. Anyone confirm?
6) Two conductor... sure? Do
I really need 2 conductors inside the braid at all points? Do I really need 2 conductors at all? Can it not be done well, using the braid as both shield and signal return? I have been reading Nutzy posts, and I recall that it's the unreliability of the shielding that makes it undesirable to use for signal return. Maybe I need to re-read, but does the fact that all joints of this 1-conductor shielded line -- signal and shielding alike -- are soldered (except that bridge wire) affect the answer?
6a) Bonus question: is the bridge/trem/string ground considered as part of the shielding? In terms of what part of the guitar's circuit the bridge/trem/strings wire should be attached to. Does it incorporate (literally) the player into the shielding scheme, is it a grounding thing, a safety thing?
7)
Shielding the pickups. That P-90 in the neck has a chrome-plated ring around it, which is soldered at two points directly to the humbucker-sized base. The ring shields the sides of the aggregate HB, and not the top. Earlier, I wrote "except the pickups", but are there easy ways to improve its shielding without sacrificing high frequencies? I don't relish the idea of unsoldering the cover, as it seems to take lots of time to melt the solder enough (=cooking my pickup & burning my little fingers... hey! I play guitar with those!) Tips, anyone? If I did take off that cover, I could try to put on a proper 2-conductor wire (unless we've decided the guitar doesn't need it? Paragraph 6).
Bridge: I did unsolder the 'Tron-style cover from the humbucker (that's how I know about burnt fingers). The pickup cam with a 1-conductor shielded wire, but I really wanted four wires there for my sound scheme, so I uncovered, disassembled, re-leaded, reassembled and re-covered it. It should be easier to remove the cover now, as I used wire rather than simple solder blobs. This bridge pickup's shielding, too, is up for Nutzy consideration. Again, it has a HB-sized Filter'Tron styled, chromed-plated cover.
The chrome is not absolutely vital, but the rest of the guitar's trim is black & chrome, so keeping the chrome is desired. Mentioned here in context of chrome's potential effect on high-freq tones.
Plenty of room in the cavity, except where the neck pickup is right next to the set-in neck heel. Pet peeve against internal wires being visible to the audience.