Author |
Topic: What pot for boo-wah |
Ethan Shaw
From: Texas, USA
|
Posted 12 Jun 2009 6:28 pm
|
|
I have a fender 2000 whose tone pot gives a perfect boo-wah. The problem is, I have a lot of trouble getting my pinky over there fast enough. I have an old, unusable crybaby wah that I've been thinking of gutting and putting a pot and cap like the fender ones.Forit to work in that pedal, it would have to have a long shaft (like the crybaby one). What should I try? OR, has anyone tried rewiring a crybaby with the original pot in it, making it a passive tone pedal? Please don't tell me to get a volume-tone pedal. I've tried that route, and want to try something different...Although, guys on here have talked about a switch rigged on your volume pedal to temporarily turn it into a tone pedal--anyone know how to do that? |
|
|
|
Frank Harris
From: San Diego, California, USA
|
Posted 14 Jun 2009 9:15 am boo-wah
|
|
I purchased a new Fender volume pedal from Musicians Friend for some reason it gives a great boo-wah effect when used. It is the model with just volume control only. Price way under 100 with case and cord in most cases. |
|
|
|
Ken Fox
From: Nashville GA USA
|
Posted 14 Jun 2009 10:45 am
|
|
The old Fender Tone and Volume pedal used a 250K pot. A 500K would be fine. Danny Gatton used a 1 meg and a .05 cap in his Tele for a great wah effect. |
|
|
|
John Bechtel
From: Nashville, Tennessee, R.I.P.
|
Posted 14 Jun 2009 11:50 am
|
|
The Fender Dual~Pro and T-8 Custom used 1Meg. Linear w/.05 cap. The hardest part was to slow down the change!!! _________________ <marquee> Go~Daddy~Go, (No), Go, It's your Break Time</marquee> L8R, jb
My T-10 Remington Steelmaster |
|
|
|
Ken Fox
From: Nashville GA USA
|
Posted 14 Jun 2009 12:07 pm
|
|
That's what I read about the Gatton setup. Most of the change was in the first 1/3 of the controls travel. Not much if any change after that. |
|
|
|