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static from pick guard ?

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ted s

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What do you think ? My Nashville seems to generate some anoying static scratchiness if I rub the pick guard. Seems worse if I have the middle p/u switched in.
What say yee ?

thanks

Ted
 
ted s said:
The search button is your friend! :D

This is the time of year you'll run into this--humidity levels in cold climates can get really low, making static a much bigger problem. Besides the obvious guitar grounding enhancements, rubbing down the pickguard with a clothes dryer anti-cling sheet really does work very well!
 
Well, we've past the most humid season here, I still have it. I'm going to have to rule out lack of humidity and start pointing to the pick guard material itself. The bounce sheet does rectify for a period though.
Love the guitar but the pick guard drives me nuts. My $99 Jay Turser Strat never has a static issue.. go figure.. :rolleyes:
 
I can't play Strats for that reason, and none of the folk remedies (Bounce sheet, anti-cling laundry spray, anti-static electronics spray, etc.) will prevent it. Shielding the cavity does not help. Those things work for a lot of people, and those things work so well for so many people, that those people become convinced that those things will work for everyone--but they won't.

AND just like your guitar, ted s, it's only on the middle Strat pickup of my Nashville Tele that I have a static problem.
However, though the entire guard can become charged on a Strat pickguard, I isolated the problem on my Tele to being present only when my finger brushed against (in my case) the lower mounting screw of the Strat pup.

I cut a very small piece of black electrical tape and covered the head of the screw. That solved the problem.

Try that and see if it works for you.
 
Yes, lower screw, same here. Something I've tried since posting above, under the pickguard, I made a wire connection between that blasted middle pup screw and the tone/switch plate. The static from the guard is less but the popping and cracking from touching that screw is GONE.
 
Highway_61 said:
I can't play Strats for that reason, and none of the folk remedies (Bounce sheet, anti-cling laundry spray, anti-static electronics spray, etc.) will prevent it. Shielding the cavity does not help. Those things work for a lot of people, and those things work so well for so many people, that those people become convinced that those things will work for everyone--but they won't.


Sure it does. Works like a charm. Then again static is probably subjective also. :D
 
This may be stupid asking but I will anyway. Do all Strats have the metal foil on the underside of the pickguard? I recently changed my pickguard on a new one and transferred the metal backing. This guitar does not have static at all. I know what you are complaining about because I have had guitars in the past that do this. That drives me nuts!

vinni
 
Thanks for reminding me Vinni, I keep meaning to do that with my Tele, it has none but cheapi Strat does, go figure..
 
Tone2TheBone said:
Sure it does. Works like a charm. Then again static is probably subjective also. :D

No, sorry; it won't.
It must work 99.9 % of the time or people wouldn't recommend it to others, but those things will not work for me.
I promise you that I have tried. I truly think I have a bit of an electrical charge. I get a spark when I put the key into the lock of my front door when I come home. I get a spark when I get out of my car.
I have tried all of the remedies, and I can testify that "always" (as in this remedy will always work) does not apply.
 
I'm as electrically charged as you...same thing...get out of the truck, touch the body and zizzz get the shock. I'm surprised I haven't blown up while gassing up but I swear to you that rubbing bounce sheets on a pickguard and properly shielding your guitar cavity and pickguard should help. I would agree with you with that 99.9 % figure though...for what it's worth. *shrugs*
 
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Highway;
we had some carpet at work that was shocking everyone, we had rubber covers on the door knobs even. we started spraying the room every day with a fine mist from a trigger head spray bottle with a concotion of one drop of liquid detergent per gallon it helped a lot. you might try that if you have carpet.
 
Hey, you guys are great: differences of opinion don't automatically become heated arguments here. That's very much appreciated.
 
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