pjmuck wrote:
Just to clarify, a linear pot would be a single pot that, when turned in either direction would be either/or pickup with the center position being the equal blend of both? (i.e. blend pot?). or do I have that wrong?
No, a linear taper pot is 0-10 like a standard volume pot you're used to, however the taper is literally a straight line (linear = line) from 0-10.
An audio taper pot has a curve from 0-10, so you'll get a slow increase in volume through most of the rotation of the knob with a big increase in the last 25% of rotation or so. If you think about that in reverse, it's why audio taper pots act like on off switches when wired lefty... you get 75% of the volume in the first 25% of rotation and then the rest from there.
With a linear taper pot, you have 25% volume at 25% rotation... 50% at 50% rotation... so on.
Logically, a linear control makes more sense, however, the guys who engineered this stuff found that adding a taper to the volume increase seemed more natural to their ears, so that's why tapers were added to the wipers. And it's true... audio taper pots sound more natural than linear taper pots when used by themselves.
Now, here's where it gets interesting... when using two volumes together and blending multiple audio signals, having that taper can actually work against you and you get what's known as "Volume Volume Syndrome," where turning down one pickup just a hair almost makes it inaudible.
You ever notice on a bass that has V/V/T that rolling off 25% of the neck pickup almost sounds the same as no neck pickup at all? It's because of that taper... in 25% of the rotation you've lost most of the volume of that pickup and it gets buried by the other pickup.
Using linear taper pots with multiple volumes decreases this effect dramatically, and allows you to blend two pickups together much, much better and in more useful ways than you can with audio taper controls.
Hope that makes sense... oh, and cool bass by the way!