Your cart is empty.
Your cart is empty.Don't settle for a pre-soldered bleed when you don't know if it is best for your needs
Simple install
Try series or parallel to find the best option for your particular guitar and setup
There is a difference
Pre soldered bleeds may seem convenient, but you need to solder in place anyway. Why not og the extra step and find out which configuration works best by twisting in place, testing, and then soldering in place?
You're going to have to solder anyway.
phil dee
Reviewed in the United States on March 1, 2025
Work good on my SG
Anggie Figueroa
Reviewed in the United States on June 28, 2024
Ya están armadosPara el precio es un muy buen productoY vienen 4
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on January 11, 2024
I installed this on a guitar (esquire) with a single, bright, bridge humbucker and I like to use my volume knob as my solo tone, rolling it down for rhythm and up to 10 for lead. I have installed similar treble bleeds on two telecasters and a stratocaster but was particularly impressed with the business card that came with this four pack showing all three different styles of treble bleed circuits.
E. Forer
Reviewed in the United States on August 5, 2023
While these are marketed as being suitable for Kinman or parallel wiring schemes, the values of the components are more conducive to the latter. Combined with 250k and 500k pots on humbucker and single coil setups, I've been happy with the treble bleed with the resistor wired in parallel with the cap. While this makes the volume control slightly touchier, to me the sound is preferable and it's a more effective filter.
azamazonshopper
Reviewed in the United States on April 11, 2022
These are great. I put them in my RG's where I usually have a '59(SH-1n) APH-1 or Bill Lawrence in the neck and a JB (TB-4) in the bridge. It helps the very dark sounding neck pickup retain it's tone without getting dark. It also keeps the bridge sound great too. I like to use the volume pot while playing so I don't have to hit as many pedals. Now I don't lose my tone with this kit. It also helps the middle single coil (stock Quantum or STK-6) keep it's glassy-ness at a low volume....this lets the tone control be the only treble attenuator.
Linkz
Reviewed in the United States on October 19, 2020
Went with the Seymour Duncan style treble bleed wiring, basically the resister is wrapped around the orange drops 2 wires in a parallel wiring scheme, then take the now combined resisters and terminate each wire into the Volume Pots 1 & 2 output legs, theres only 3 and #3 should be soldered to the pots body so theres only 2 outputs you can solder these onto, its a very simple and easy mod to do that really makes a huge difference as far as turning the volume down, you get a much smoother decline in volume then the pot normally will make it sound, its a cheep and easy mod to do when you already have everything exposed, i wouldnt take your strat completely apart just to do this mod, but id its a LP style guitar with a back plate then its worth it
Joe M
Reviewed in the United States on August 4, 2019
I bought these just to mess with. I wired one in parallel and it robbed too much low end when lowering volume. I put that one in a neck pickup of a humbucker, It gave it more of a single coil quality when lowering the volume. I wired the rest of them in series ( my personal recomendation). I put one in the bridge pickup humbucker ( same guitar), one in a tele, and the last in a strat. It maintains the low end and high end when turning down the volume on the guitar. I have been playing and experimenting with a small 15 watt tube amp. With the guitar cranked the tone is bluesy. Lower the volume to 7 on the guitar... crystal clear. The parts are high quality and do not melt under high heat ( at least in my experience). I bought me two more sets to put on all my guitars and give a few to friends. get them.
Kindle Customer
Reviewed in the United States on August 29, 2018
they work well
Recommended Products