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Fender duo sonic wiring diagram9/20/2023 ![]() Ibanez® is a registered trademark of Hoshino Gakki Co., Ltd.Hipshot® KickAss™ and Ultralite®, are trademarks of Hipshot Products.Harmony® is a registered trademark of BandLab Americas LLC.Guild® and S-200 T-Bird® are registered trademarks of The Guild Guitar Company.Grover®, Rotomatics®, Imperial™, Sta-Tite™, Titan®, Perma-Tension™, Champion™, Ultra Capo™, Tune-Kraft™, Acousticraft™, Leader™, and Minstrel™ are trademarks of Grover Musical Products, Inc.Graph Tech®, TUSQ®, Ghost®, ResoMax®, StringSaver®, Nuboneis®, are registered trademarks of Graph Tech Guitar Labs Ltd.Gotoh® is a registered trademark of Gotoh Gut Co., Ltd.Gibson®, Casino®, Coronet®, Sorrento®, Crestwood®, Emperor Swingster®, SG®, Melody Maker®, Flying V®, Thunderbird®, Ripper Bass®, Marauder®, Sonex®, Explorer®, Midtown Custom®, Riviera®, Epiphone®, ES-335®, ES-175®, ES-125®, EB5®, L-4C®, L-5D®, L-6S®, Marauder Deluxe®, S-1®, Firebird®, Les Paul®, are registered trademarks of Gibson Brands, Inc.Gavitt® is a registered trademark of Gavitt Wire & Cable Co.Floyd Rose® is a registered trademark of AP International.Fishman® is a registered trademark of Fishman.Gretsch® is a registered trademark of Fred Gretsch® Enterprises.The distinctive headstock designs of the Stratocaster®, Telecaster®, Jazz Bass®, and Precision Bass® are registered trademarks of Fender Musical Instruments Corporation. Fender®, Duo-Sonic®, Musicmaster, Bronco®, Lead®, Meteora®, Toronado®, Bullet®, Jag-Stang®, Cyclone®, Stratocaster®, Jazz Bass®, Telecaster®, Precision Bass ®, Mustang®, Esquire®, Jaguar®, Jazzmaster®,and Squier® are registered trademarks of Fender Musical Instruments Corporation.EVH® and D-Tuna® are registered trademarks of E.L.V.H.ESP® is a registered trademark of ESP Company, Limited.Electroswitch® is a registered trademark of Electroswitch Corporation.D'Angelico® Deluxe Atlantic®, Deluxe Bedford®, Deluxe Brighton®, Deluxe Ludlow®, Premier Bedford®, Premier Brighton®, Premier Ludlow® is a registered trademark of D&squo Angelico Guitars Of America.CTS® is a registered trademark of CTS Corporation.Bourns® is a registered trademark of Bourns, Inc.Black Cherry USA® and Hollow Point® are registered trademarks of Black Cherry USA.Bill Foley® and Grandaddy® are registered trademarks of Bill Foley Fine Instruments.Bigsby® is a registered trademark of Fender Musical Instruments Corporation.Big Bends®, String Sleeves™, G-String Wipes™, Fret Board Juice™, AXS Wipe™, and Encore Scratch remover™ are trademarks of Big Bends LLC.Belden® is a registered trademark of Belden Incorporated.Babicz® is a registered trademark of Babicz Design Ltd.Alpha® is a registered trademark of Alpha Products Inc.3M® is a registered trademark of The 3M Company.and are not to be represented as products of the following companies unless otherwise noted. WD replacement parts are made by or for WD Music Products, Inc. Kluson®, the Kluson logo, Kluson stylized K, Kluson pinstripes and logo / artwork design(s), are registered trademarks of WD Music Products, Inc.Īll other trademarks, service marks and trade names present on this site are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners. WD®, the WD logo, and logo / artwork design(s), are registered trademarks of WD Music Products, Inc. Was thinking of getting these CTS 500K pots on Amazon. I got the guitar in hand and am getting parts ready to install. I'll get back to you, most likely tomorrow. I might have a few minutes to draw something really quick up this weekend. I would like to stick with using the pots for now and keeping the stock three way switch, if possible. I do plan to go with Push/Pull pots as I heard Push/Push don't live as long as Push/Pull. Would you have a wiring diagram handy for this? I can solder but am not sure what to solder to. If you change the pickup selector to a rotary type, you can add series to that, and have no dead spots, but that's just a thought. The thing is, you will always have a dead spot if you use a separate switch for series-parallel switching. I always wire up the neck pickup for out-of-phase. I've designed some circuits with one, the other, and both from time-to-time. If you use push-pull or push-push pots, you won't need to do any drilling.Īs for the wiring, it can definitely be done. I bought them by accident, but they are spring-loaded and I quite like them a lot. Don't forget about push-push pots too! I have a pair of those for my buddy's guitar I'm rebuilding for him.
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