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Hum and grounding

Jack_H

Junior Member
Messages
96
I am building a Strat with tremolo, but with the ground wire connected to the tremolo claw there's still a hum. When I touch the claw the hum stops. Logically the wiring is correct and my body is acting as ground.

Is this a case of not enough material on tremolo claw for grounding? Am I missing something?
 
Do you have a digital multimeter to confirm the ground links? Could there be any coatings on the components that are preventing the ground extending to the strings?
 
Don't know your exact situation, so take this free advice for what it's worth ;)

With electric guitar, the hum is always coming from your body. Your body acts as a antenna/capacitor and picks up all kinds of EMI hash from lights, computers, phones, etc. When that happens your body starts radiating that EMI back to the environment. Grounding your body drains that capacitor and you stop radiating EMI.

With a typical electric guitar, the guitar is mostly picking up you. But, with the bridge / claw / whateveryougotthat'sconnectedtothestrings grounded, you become grounded when you play the guitar. This is what touching the trem claw does: it grounds you - you stop emitting that stored up EMI.

So, your situation sounds about right from where I'm at. If in doubt, try grounding your body by touching something else (the amp or something) and see if the hum goes away then as well.
 
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