tfarny said:My way is to not solder anything to pots, but instead ground everything to a screw that I put inside of the cavity. Keeps it simple, clean, and avoids damage to pots.
TJD said:Do I just screw the bridge over the ground wire or do I need to solder it to the bottom of the bridge
tfarny said:What I've done on a couple of bridges is to use that copper foil shielding tape to tape the ground wire to the underside of the bridge
bpmorton777 said:the pot shells have to be grounded, dont they? Ive always at least had a wire that connected all the pot shells to ground.
tfarny said:......works on tele bridges too.
line6man said:Yep, that's what I've always done.
I literally burst out laughing when I found out it was common practice to just screw bridges down over the bare ground wire.
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tfarny said:This kind of shows it, you can see the ground wires headed to a central spot, but it's not an original idea. You just screw a little eyelet or wood screw into the side of the control route, then everything that says "ground" goes to that, you can go ahead and get a nice gob of solder good and hot without worrying about frying anything. Then you wire from the central ground to the sleeve connection on the output jack. To me it just seems neater and more foolproof.
ByteFrenzy said:tfarny said:This kind of shows it, you can see the ground wires headed to a central spot, but it's not an original idea. You just screw a little eyelet or wood screw into the side of the control route, then everything that says "ground" goes to that, you can go ahead and get a nice gob of solder good and hot without worrying about frying anything. Then you wire from the central ground to the sleeve connection on the output jack. To me it just seems neater and more foolproof.
It's also a very simple and effective way to avoid :evil4: ground loops :evil4: if those scare you...
CrackedPepper said:What the heck is a ground loop?