I haven't had this guitar very long barely 2 months, second hand off a friendly Ebay fellow & was a bargain.
Anyways there's a mini switch pictured below.
http://i63.tinypic.com/1zmgg12.jpgExcuse me for being a bit dim but I think it splits the pup from humbucker to single coil but I'm not sure?
Please could someone tell me what each switch position does & to which pickup?
If this is true it will make this guitar incredibly versatile, I mean humbucker & single coil in one wow!!!
Btw, I don't intend to go out & sell my Fender Telecaster... just yet. Ha ha
So for now I'll leave it with you guys & thanks.
I forgot to say, it's a PB401 if that needs to be known?
RH;
Comments
It's a great pickup.
single coil guitars. What I'm trying to say is "when the switch is down, is that P90?" "when in the middle, is that
humbucker?" & so on.
The alternative - and the way I did it - is to buy the matching Triple Shot mounting ring which contains microswitches for toggling between the options.
https://www.seymourduncan.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/P-Rails-with-Triple-Shot-arched-Set-Black.png
The mode switch on the ESP/LTD Potbelly guitar offers single/series/single. The Rail coil is the one that sounds a bit thin and weedy.
It is possible to flip between all four coil permutations per P-Rails pickup by using push-pull pots.
One option is to use two push-pull pots to govern the mode status of both P-Rails pickups simultaneously. The other option is to have independent control via four push-pull pots.
The alternative is the Seymour Duncan Triple Shot humbucker mounting surrounds, as illustrated in DiscoStu's post above.
Installing the surrounds requires great care. There is a computer-type ribbon connector between the two PCBs in the Triple Shot. Rough handling can result in breakages at the ends of these connectors. Resoldering repairs would require they patience of several saints.