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Tony B
28-04-2016, 07:58 PM
OK, sorry for more on shielding...

I am ready to set up my JB4. I have the copper tape coming (hopefully get it tomorrow) so I am preparing for the big event :).

I understand from the various posts that I will be lining the cavities with the foil (get that) and that the foil should be earthed and I believe I saw that the control panel should be shielded as well.

So my questions are;


Do I have to still apply the existing earth to the bridge (assume this is a must)?
Do I have to earth the copper shielding to the bridge as well (with another shielded cable) or can I earth to one of the pots?
Do I remove the pots from the control panel and stick the copper to the underside?
Do I need to earth the underside (assume not given the pots grounding on the panel)?
Do I shield the inside of the pickup cavities (assume you would)?
If you shield the inside of the pickup cavities is it OK to earth then back onto the shielding in the control cavity (going all the way to the bridge would mean some longer cables and we all know cables are antennas)?


One final question not shielding related :) When fitting the pickups I see that the springs are supplied, is there no need to place some foam under the pickups? Are the springs adequate to stop them rattling?

Cheers
Tony

PS I don't know why I've waited 45 years to build a guitar and will be building more :)

dingobass
28-04-2016, 08:25 PM
Hey Tony.
Yes you will need to earth the bridge.
The control plate should come pre shielded. If not, shield it.
If you shield the pup cavities, no need to earth that back. The copper acts as a filter to stop feed back from external sources such as florescent lights and inter planetary space modulators 😜

I always shove some high density foam under my pups, it stops the rattles.

AndrewA
28-04-2016, 08:30 PM
Hi Tony,
Every guitar builder will have their own way of shielding and some will even leave it out completely. I'm no expert, but I can help with some of your questions.
* The bridge must have a connection to earth. Without it your guitar will pick up everything, including truck CB radio.
* As long as everything that needs to be earthed is connected somehow to the tab on the guitar jack, it should be fine. The pots are the easiest place to connect to. You don't need to connect the cavity shielding to the bridge if they are both already connected to an earth elsewhere.
* If you are applying shielding to the back of the scratch plate, its neater/easier to remove the pots, apply the foil, then put the pots in. It also creates a physical earth connection between this shielding and the body of the pots.
* You don't need to apply any shielding (but it will sound better if you do). Its up to you where you want to apply it. I like shielding the cavity behind the pots, the pickup cavities and the back of the scratch plate.
* Earth cables won't act like antennas (unless you get some wiring seriously wrong) but if you can find another closer earth point to join to, that should be fine. I like to join all my cavity foil together and only have one wire joining this to the back of a pot, less wires = neater and easier to fault find if needs be.
Lastly: the springs hold the pickups in a sort of floating tension, probably to stop body vibrations from affecting the pickups sound. Foam under the pickups would probably change the sound for the worse. At this stage, the best advice I can give is try it out, see what you think, you can always change it later.

... or what Dingo said.

Muzza
28-04-2016, 08:53 PM
Is it still necessary to install shielding if you're using humbuckers?

Gavin1393
28-04-2016, 08:57 PM
Short answer is that humbuckers 'buck' the hum....but can still benefit from shielding to get rid of any possible RF.....

fender3x
28-04-2016, 09:05 PM
Is it still necessary to install shielding if you're using humbuckers?
Sort answer is yes. Humbuckers buck hum... basically the hum is the AC cycles from wall current. 60 cycles in the US. Not sure about Australia. Sheilding helps with that too, but also with radio and other "RF" that guitars pick up by being antennas.

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-N900A using Tapatalk

Tony B
28-04-2016, 09:18 PM
Thank you all for your responses.

Gotta say my Pitbull experience from day one has been top notch. It is so good to see the value add in Aus rather than the other way round.

This is what CLICKS and MORTAR is all about. If you can't beat the Chinese, use them to your advantage. Great work everyone. The way you guys have tailored this into your own product is fantastic.

A Pitbull devotee and I haven't even finished my first project :)...

Tony B
28-04-2016, 09:19 PM
Oh and damn the blocking of the interplanetary stuff DB... that's the stuff the Blues is made of...

fender3x
28-04-2016, 09:24 PM
Oh and damn the blocking of the interplanetary stuff DB... that's the stuff the Blues is made of...
I thought he was talking about something else...so I can take off my aluminum foil hat?

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-N900A using Tapatalk

dingobass
28-04-2016, 11:17 PM
Oh and damn the blocking of the interplanetary stuff DB... that's the stuff the Blues is made of...

I always thought it was the flux capacitors......😆

Fretworn
29-04-2016, 11:21 AM
Welcome Tony B, happy you've enjoyed the process. I hope you enjoy playing it just as much.

Oliwally
16-07-2018, 05:50 PM
I'm sorry, could I please resurrect this thread and ask some more noob questions? Here it goes:

Assuming that I correctly use copper shielding tape in all of my cavities and on the back of the scratch plate (grounded at the jack or volume pot housing, and overlapping at joints to have complete faraday cage) and the pots make contact with the shielding at the fitting holes …

… do I then still need to ground my pots by soldering wire from housing to housing or is it a complete waste of time?
… if I connect the housings anyway, does it do any harm? Will I create a ‘ground loop’ that will give me trouble?
… should I still use shielded wire and connect the shielding to the back of pots, or is this a complete waste of time?
… if I use shielded wire anyway, would it do any harm?
… if I use shielded wire anyway is it correct that I only ground one end of the shielding to avoid a ‘ground loop’?

Thansk a in advance for your thoughts.

Oli

wazkelly
16-07-2018, 06:58 PM
Hi Oli, presume you are doing a Strat?

First and foremost is to make sure all pots have ground wires soldered to each other, like in a daisy chain. To rely on just the copper tape may not work very well.

Shielded wire? I have used mostly vintage push back cloth wire and never bothered with the braided shielded wire as most of my builds have have required quite short lengths of wires, except for the just finished ES1 where some lengths were between 20cm & 30cm with no earth buzzing issues. In fact no copper tape was used anywhere at all on that build.

Some folks reckon braided stuff is better where there is a long run up to a 3 way switch as in LP's and that may be true. I just prefer to run a separate hot, separate ground and not too keen on inner & outer core stuff as invariably the outer screen stuff is the weakest point and can let you down.

Marcel
16-07-2018, 08:47 PM
I'm sorry, could I please resurrect this thread and ask some more noob questions? Here it goes:

Assuming that I correctly use copper shielding tape in all of my cavities and on the back of the scratch plate (grounded at the jack or volume pot housing, and overlapping at joints to have complete faraday cage) and the pots make contact with the shielding at the fitting holes …

… do I then still need to ground my pots by soldering wire from housing to housing of is it a complete waste of time?
… if I connect the housings anyway, does it do any harm? Will I create a ‘ground loop’ that will give me trouble?
… should I still use shielded wire and connect the shielding to the back of pots, or is this a complete waste of time?
… if I use shielded wire anyway, would it do any harm?
… if I use shielded wire anyway is it correct that I only ground one end of the shielding to avoid a ‘ground loop’?

Thansk a in advance for your thoughts.

Oli

Grounding is often misunderstood... even by the so called experts..

... 1/ A soldered ground wire jumping from pot to pot helps to ensure a reliable ground connection under almost every cicumstance. You may have fully shielded your control cavity but that loose nut on the volume pot will make an awful noise if nil wire is used to permanently bond the earth connections together. And we all know how often volume pots become loose...

... 2/ Ground loops. Ideally we want to connect earth's or grounds in a star pattern, with all the 'radials' coming back to a single central point which is then subsequently connected through to our pedals and on to our amp. Any 'earth loop' you create anywhere only becomes a problem when a real and tangible AC or DC current passes through any portion of that loop, so in the case of earth loops in the shielding within the body of a guitar there is nil real DC or AC current in that copper shielding you so carefully fitted so there should be nil problem. Between your pedals and your amp, yep there is AC (your guitar signal), and then there is DC in the daisy chain power cable feeding power to your pedals so there is plenty of opportunity for the problem of earth loop or ground loop noise.

... 3/ Shielding when done correctly is never a waste of time.

... 4/ Over shielding (shielding everything in existence simply because you can) can lead to some issues. The biggest issue being the loss of high frequencies. Every shielded cable has capacitance from the centre conductor to the shield. The more shielded cable you have the more capacitance is there to suck away your higher frequencies just like your tone knob does when wound out down. There are times you need shielded cable to protect your (unbalanced) signal from interference so you will need to use it, the rest of the time try to avoid it if you can so that the higher frequencies of your awesome axe will actually be able to get to your amp.

... 5/ Grounding one end. This is a huge topic, bigger than this reply should go, but within a guitar the grounding of only one end of a shielded cable is generally not needed or preferred. You do need to have a circuit for things to work so you will need to be able to chase a continuity path from the centre pin of your guitar jack through all the parts of the guitar and then back to the sleeve connection of the guitar jack, and if that means using the shield of a cable to get from one place to another within the guitar then it must be done. On a shielded balanced line microphone cable used in a PA it is often done that only one end of the shield is connected (usually the source end), and inside a guitar amp the technique is quite often found to minimise stray signal pick up from other active components inside the amp, but inside a guitar it is rare and only done in certain cases due to very specific issues and if nothing else works.

As I said before there must be some DC or AC component on a part of any earth/ground loop for any negative issue to manifest. If you wire your earth/ground from your jack to a conveniently located pot, and then wire from that pot out to each location that requires an earth/ground connection then you will maximise your protection from 'interference' and minimise all those other issues. And follow the KISS principal ... 'Keep It Simple'...

Oliwally
17-07-2018, 05:36 AM
Hi Oli, presume you are doing a Strat?

First and foremost is to make sure all pots have ground wires soldered to each other, like in a daisy chain. To rely on just the copper tape may not work very well.

Shielded wire? I have used mostly vintage push back cloth wire and never bothered with the braided shielded wire as most of my builds have have required quite short lengths of wires, except for the just finished ES1 where some lengths were between 20cm & 30cm with no earth buzzing issues. In fact no copper tape was used anywhere at all on that build.

Some folks reckon braided stuff is better where there is a long run up to a 3 way switch as in LP's and that may be true. I just prefer to run a separate hot, separate ground and not too keen on inner & outer core stuff as invariably the outer screen stuff is the weakest point and can let you down.

Hi Wazkelly, thanks for helping out.

I'm building a RCA-4 Bass, my first build ever.

Cool to know that I still have to connect the pots as I've read in many places. Thanks for confirming this.

The shielded wire I was hoping to use is audio stuff from Jaycar (https://www.jaycar.com.au/single-screened-audio-cable-sold-per-metre/p/WB1500). Single core, multi strand, shielded, PVC on the outside.

I'm hesitant to use 'braided on the outside' wire because if it touches other components it may cause issues??

Oliwally
17-07-2018, 05:50 AM
Grounding is often misunderstood... even by the so called experts..

... 1/ A soldered ground wire jumping from pot to pot helps to ensure a reliable ground connection under almost every cicumstance. You may have fully shielded your control cavity but that loose nut on the volume pot will make an awful noise if nil wire is used to permanently bond the earth connections together. And we all know how often volume pots become loose...

... 2/ Ground loops. Ideally we want to connect earth's or grounds in a star pattern, with all the 'radials' coming back to a single central point which is then subsequently connected through to our pedals and on to our amp. Any 'earth loop' you create anywhere only becomes a problem when a real and tangible AC or DC current passes through any portion of that loop, so in the case of earth loops in the shielding within the body of a guitar there is nil real DC or AC current in that copper shielding you so carefully fitted so there should be nil problem. Between your pedals and your amp, yep there is AC (your guitar signal), and then there is DC in the daisy chain power cable feeding power to your pedals so there is plenty of opportunity for the problem of earth loop or ground loop noise.

... 3/ Shielding when done correctly is never a waste of time.

... 4/ Over shielding (shielding everything in existence simply because you can) can lead to some issues. The biggest issue being the loss of high frequencies. Every shielded cable has capacitance from the centre conductor to the shield. The more shielded cable you have the more capacitance is there to suck away your higher frequencies just like your tone knob does when wound out down. There are times you need shielded cable to protect your (unbalanced) signal from interference so you will need to use it, the rest of the time try to avoid it if you can so that the higher frequencies of your awesome axe will actually be able to get to your amp.

... 5/ Grounding one end. This is a huge topic, bigger than this reply should go, but within a guitar the grounding of only one end of a shielded cable is generally not needed or preferred. You do need to have a circuit for things to work so you will need to be able to chase a continuity path from the centre pin of your guitar jack through all the parts of the guitar and then back to the sleeve connection of the guitar jack, and if that means using the shield of a cable to get from one place to another within the guitar then it must be done. On a shielded balanced line microphone cable used in a PA it is often done that only one end of the shield is connected (usually the source end), and inside a guitar amp the technique is quite often found to minimise stray signal pick up from other active components inside the amp, but inside a guitar it is rare and only done in certain cases due to very specific issues and if nothing else works.

As I said before there must be some DC or AC component on a part of any earth/ground loop for any negative issue to manifest. If you wire your earth/ground from your jack to a conveniently located pot, and then wire from that pot out to each location that requires an earth/ground connection then you will maximise your protection from 'interference' and minimise all those other issues. And follow the KISS principal ... 'Keep It Simple'...

Hi Marcel,

Thanks very much for taking the time to write this comprehensive reply - fantastic stuff and makes a lot of sense.

I am planning to have a 9V preamp built into the RCA-4 Bass I'm building (just because...), so I guess that would qualify as a DC component that could give me grief.

I will have a go at your suggestions (as much as my humble electronics understanding allows) and not "shield everything in existence simply because I can" (love the way you put that - exactly what I was planning to do).

I'll try to keep it simple and use the star pattern grounding, probably using a small screw through the copper shielding in a convenient place and then branching out from there.

Awesome help folks, thanks so much! I'm not quite up to the wiring yet (just making sure I'm ready when I get to it) and I'm sure I'll come for more help when I have a go.

Marcel
17-07-2018, 07:33 AM
If you are using copper shielding tape you can solder to it directly.

I use a sizeable Weller workbench soldering station so the process is relatively simple for me. Firstly I select the site of my joint and ensure it is clean and free of finger grease. I apply the iron to the spot and then add solder a few seconds latter until the solder flows out across the copper up to a blob size of about 5mm, then remove the iron and the feed solder. I clean and prepare the wire I want to use by stripping the non-conductive coating and then tinning the bare end using the iron and enough solder to coat the entire bare end. Then I place the tinned bare wire end on top of my blob of solder on the copper shielding in the position I desire and use the iron to fuse the two together..... The result more often than not is a clean shiny permanent connection to the copper.

As in everything we do ... Practice makes perfect...

On the earth wire to the bridge and on a few builds I've done where on many builds the bridge just presses on top of a bare wire poking out of a hole I've used copper tape around the hole and soldered to that. On my RCM-4 the bridge itself is quite large so a few square cm of copper tape underneath is easily hidden. I placed the copper tape over the often quite sizeable ground wire hole, then pressed into the tape over the hole area to create a hole in the tape, then attached/soldered the ground wire to the part of the tape that was now IN the hole yet still attached to the tape on the surface. The tape on the surface is sandwiched between the bridge and the body so makes a consistent and stable electrical connection... which also now doesn't fall out if the bridge for any reason becomes loose...

Oliwally
18-07-2018, 07:38 PM
If you are using copper shielding tape you can solder to it directly.

I use a sizeable Weller workbench soldering station so the process is relatively simple for me. Firstly I select the site of my joint and ensure it is clean and free of finger grease. I apply the iron to the spot and then add solder a few seconds latter until the solder flows out across the copper up to a blob size of about 5mm, then remove the iron and the feed solder. I clean and prepare the wire I want to use by stripping the non-conductive coating and then tinning the bare end using the iron and enough solder to coat the entire bare end. Then I place the tinned bare wire end on top of my blob of solder on the copper shielding in the position I desire and use the iron to fuse the two together..... The result more often than not is a clean shiny permanent connection to the copper.

As in everything we do ... Practice makes perfect...

On the earth wire to the bridge and on a few builds I've done where on many builds the bridge just presses on top of a bare wire poking out of a hole I've used copper tape around the hole and soldered to that. On my RCM-4 the bridge itself is quite large so a few square cm of copper tape underneath is easily hidden. I placed the copper tape over the often quite sizeable ground wire hole, then pressed into the tape over the hole area to create a hole in the tape, then attached/soldered the ground wire to the part of the tape that was now IN the hole yet still attached to the tape on the surface. The tape on the surface is sandwiched between the bridge and the body so makes a consistent and stable electrical connection... which also now doesn't fall out if the bridge for any reason becomes loose...

Thanks again Marcel. It all doesn't sound crazy difficult... if you know how. I'll have a go according to your instructions and let you know how it goes!

Oli

Old Tooth Hopkins
19-07-2018, 01:01 PM
While we're on this topic, I was researching a similar issue, and whether aluminium can be used and came across this interesting thread (http://www.strat-talk.com/threads/shielding-copper-vs-aluminum-tone-and-effect.81311/)on strat-talk...

Quote:

"I can't find the technical links now, but aluminium has better shielding characteristics at audio frequencies and is especially better at shielding against the particular noises such as those generated by fluorescent lights.

I think it has a correspondingly higher effect on the tone; I shielded a Tele with al foil tape and did not notice a change in sound - although that was a bright guitar to start with. My Strat came with a thickish al pickguard and always sounded a little dull/warm. Changing this out for a plastic guard with foil shielding really let the highs sparkle, quite noticeably to me.

One of the main advantages of copper is that it can be found with conductive glue, and can very easily be soldered. People give good reports of its function as a shield too."

What are the experienced builders' views on this?

Thanks :)

Fretworn
19-07-2018, 04:03 PM
In the earlier days of the forum there were a few guys who used aluminium foil or even aluminium roasting trays for shielding. You have to glue it in of course, but that isn’t that difficult.

Marcel
19-07-2018, 04:53 PM
While we're on this topic, I was researching a similar issue, and whether aluminium can be used and came across this interesting thread (http://www.strat-talk.com/threads/shielding-copper-vs-aluminum-tone-and-effect.81311/)on strat-talk...

Quote:

"I can't find the technical links now, but aluminium has better shielding characteristics at audio frequencies and is especially better at shielding against the particular noises such as those generated by fluorescent lights.

I think it has a correspondingly higher effect on the tone; I shielded a Tele with al foil tape and did not notice a change in sound - although that was a bright guitar to start with. My Strat came with a thickish al pickguard and always sounded a little dull/warm. Changing this out for a plastic guard with foil shielding really let the highs sparkle, quite noticeably to me.

One of the main advantages of copper is that it can be found with conductive glue, and can very easily be soldered. People give good reports of its function as a shield too."

What are the experienced builders' views on this?

Thanks :)

Virtually any conductive metal can be (and has been) used as shielding.

Materials in common use today in the electronics industry are metals like Tin plate, block Aluminium, sheet steel and galvanised steel.... Equally valid options are things like Gold leaf (think of the Apollo lunar landers), Lead sheet and cast Iron...

Hopefully you all can see a theme here in regards to shielding ... Aluminium or Copper, both work equally as well...

Sonic Mountain
20-07-2018, 08:51 AM
I shielded my cheapy ashton bass with Aluminum foil and spray adhesive - finally got rid of a hum that has bugged me for ages. So I concur that it works fine (and is cheap as chips)

I've done a couple of my PBG builds with copper tape and they are all silent as well. It seems to be more worthwhile when you have single coils. I have a number of un shielded guitars with humbuckers that aren't noisy at all.

wazkelly
20-07-2018, 10:24 AM
Still a good idea to shield control cavities whether single coil or humbucker, just don't need to go as nuts on the HB's.

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Marcel
01-08-2018, 09:04 AM
Just came across this video... at least one big lesson (about shielding) to be had here...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5LDu-AJgWL0


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5LDu-AJgWL0

fender3x
02-08-2018, 11:03 AM
I agree that they work equally well, and that there is no sonic difference between the two. I have used copper tape which is expensive and doesn't solder will. And aluminum AC ducting tape which does not solder at all, but is conductive through the adhesive used to hold it in place and is dirt cheap. One $10 roll is enough to do every guitar I will ever buy or build.

Sent from my ONEPLUS A3000 using Tapatalk

king casey
02-08-2018, 11:22 AM
Since he made a sweeping derogatory statement about 'kit guitars' I've simply avoided this bumptious git.

cheers, Mark.

Simon Barden
03-08-2018, 12:56 AM
He's quite fun at times, but does display a lot of ignorance (or at least acts that way for the camera). He touches the bridge pickup cover, which isn't earthed, and says "it's fine". Also, you really should check for continuity on the ohms setting, as screening works up to about 1meg ohm, it doesn't have to be <1 ohm.

I can get very cheap copper tape on eBay, Fender3x, which does take solder well (at least for me) from eBay. Say US$8 for a 30m roll of 1.25" tape. But even with the conductive adhesive stuff you still need to check for continuity between strips and I find I often need to put another strip crosswise over strips running parallel to get good continuity (I have no idea why as there is always a decent overlap). I have bought much more expensive screening kits in the past with a mixture of thin tape and large sections of thin copper which can look neater, but now just use the tape.

king casey
03-08-2018, 07:25 AM
He does display a lot of ignorance

I will take on board one nugget of info.. 'That's 20 minutes of my life that I'm not getting back'.

cheers, Mark.

Marcel
03-08-2018, 08:58 AM
All of us display some level of ignorance to what others consider as their trade... I honestly can't call myself a painter/finisher or a luthier for that matter but it doesn't stop me from giving it a decent go...

While I did laugh most of the way through the video I'll give him credit in that he did somehow achieve the desired outcome, that being a working and correctly shielded set of electronics in the guitar...

fender3x
04-08-2018, 02:04 AM
I may have just had bad luck with my copper tape, though I think I got it some place reputable. Agree that MUCH continuity testing should be done no matter what method is used.

That said, Simon is right that copper tape is not that expensive. It's more that Alu tape is dirt cheap, easy to get at big box stores, and comes in 2" by 50 yard lengths...

Sent from my ONEPLUS A3000 using Tapatalk

wazkelly
06-08-2018, 08:33 PM
We can get this stuff at any major hardware or gardening store over here for less than $9 bucks and it does a great job.....haven't had any slugs or snails trying eat a guitar since using it.....

27685

Stops all the usual electrical buzzing and humming issues too.

fender3x
06-09-2018, 11:12 PM
Never thought of that! Amazon has it for roughly the same price.

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dave.king1
07-09-2018, 04:34 AM
We can get this stuff at any major hardware or gardening store over here for less than $9 bucks and it does a great job.....haven't had any slugs or snails trying eat a guitar since using it.....

27685

Stops all the usual electrical buzzing and humming issues too.

This is what I used in the Tuff Dog, it takes solder well to tie all the areas together