Can a pick-up go bad over time? One of my favorite guitars went unplayed for a few years - an original American made Vivian Campbell / Kramer Nightswan. The guitar has a Seymour Duncan Full Shred pickup in the bridge position, and a Seymour Duncan JB in the middle position (nothing in the neck position - a unique look).
Since it's been a while since I've played it, I've forgotten exactly which way the 3-way switch works, but clearly one pick-up is not working right (and I *think* it's the JB). When I switch the 3-way to position 1, I get a normal sound, position 2 (the two pickups combined) sounds just like channel 1 with just a little more tin top-end. In position 3, I get the thinnest most disgusting sound you can imagine with maybe 1/10th of the volume of the other pickup. It's very quiet and very frail. Basically, completely unusable for anything other than a creepy special effect.
So, first, any idea what happened?
Second, how can I tell for sure, when I'm in any given position, which pickup(s) is/are active?
Finally, is it likely an electronics (ie wiring, pot, switch) problem or a problem with the pick-up? My guitar tech told me (before I knew about this issue) that he could re-wire the whole thing with all new pots and jacks for about $70, and since it needs that anyway (scratchy volume pot and the jack is starting to go bad) I'm tempted to give it to him and see if the re-wire fixes it. Is that realistic or hopelessly optimistic?
Thanks for any opinions or tech provided!
-Scott Whitehead
Since it's been a while since I've played it, I've forgotten exactly which way the 3-way switch works, but clearly one pick-up is not working right (and I *think* it's the JB). When I switch the 3-way to position 1, I get a normal sound, position 2 (the two pickups combined) sounds just like channel 1 with just a little more tin top-end. In position 3, I get the thinnest most disgusting sound you can imagine with maybe 1/10th of the volume of the other pickup. It's very quiet and very frail. Basically, completely unusable for anything other than a creepy special effect.
So, first, any idea what happened?
Second, how can I tell for sure, when I'm in any given position, which pickup(s) is/are active?
Finally, is it likely an electronics (ie wiring, pot, switch) problem or a problem with the pick-up? My guitar tech told me (before I knew about this issue) that he could re-wire the whole thing with all new pots and jacks for about $70, and since it needs that anyway (scratchy volume pot and the jack is starting to go bad) I'm tempted to give it to him and see if the re-wire fixes it. Is that realistic or hopelessly optimistic?
Thanks for any opinions or tech provided!
-Scott Whitehead