• Ernie Ball
  • MusicMan
  • Sterling by MusicMan

whitestrat

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 13, 2007
Messages
2,589
Location
The Little Red Dot
Please bear with me...:D

I read that the Silent Circuit is meant mainly to deal with 60 cycle hum right? Then what about when it's used in countries with non-60 cycle power supplys? Like Singapore for example, where we use 50 cycle instead.

Does that mean the Silent circuit becomes redundant?

Does the SS affect hiss and grounding noise as well?

Also, for a Silo Spec in HSS, is the humbucker (I know it's probably dumb, but I better ask cos I'm not that smart...:D) wired thru the circuit too?
 

Ripper

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 6, 2006
Messages
1,093
Location
Singapore
My experience with the AL:

Silent circuit off (No battery)
Clean amp with no gain/distortion --> All position quiet/noiseless sound.
Dirty amp --> 1/3/5 position --> hum, 2/4 position --> auto hum cancelling.

Silent ciruit on (with battery)
Clean/Dirty amp --> 1/3/5 position --> IMPROVED noised reduction.

The silent circuit, in short, will tame the noise/hum of any single coil position.
 

Ripper

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 6, 2006
Messages
1,093
Location
Singapore
^ Yup. Thats when I play with a dirty amp, and without a battery to activate the silent circuit, position 1/3/5 (single-coil only positions) hums. But when I play on a clean amp(well-grounded), any position is quiet.;) I think its natural for position 1/3/5 to hum, as in the same for the single coil and single coil+bridge positions of my Y2D...
 
Last edited:

Brian G

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 26, 2006
Messages
65
Location
Victoria, BC
I'm happy to be corrected if I'm wrong, but I believe that even with the battery out, the signal is still passing thru an inductor.

In late May or thereabouts, I'm going to try an experiment and have the SS taken out of the circuit on my Axis SS MM90's, to see if it makes a difference.

I'm going to do a pickup swap as well, but I'll only do one thing at a time, so I can form an opinion on the SS. No disrespect to the stock pickups, I just haven't found a stock production guitar that couldn't be improved by an electronics upgrade. And I just can't resist trying it out.

We'll see.

Brian
 

beej

Moderator
Joined
Aug 16, 2004
Messages
12,243
Location
Toronto, Canada
The Silent Circuit has a small "dummy coil" inside and an op amp to buffer that coil's signal. The dummy coil picks up background noise regardless of what frequency it is. 50 Hz, 60 Hz, doesn't matter. This signal is then buffered internally and subtracted from you guitar's signal, so you hear less noise. It's generally only wired up to single coils or MM90s, there's no reason to have it wired up to a humbucker (unless it was particularly noisy, in which case you could actually do it.)

Brian- the inductor's signal is fed to an op-amp inside the little device. The output of this is then fed to the ground of the pickups. When you take the battery out, the output of the op-amp is effectively at ground so there is no contribution from the coil or the other circuitry in the Silent Circuit. So that effectively removes it from the circuit. You can try taking it out it to see. Or easy way to prove it is to actually ground the negative leads of the pickups (you could do this with alligator clips so as to avoid soldering).

I like these little guys so much I've actually put them in other guitars (including my Morse and Y2D).
 

paranoid70

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 9, 2007
Messages
2,647
Location
Long Beach, CA
Please bear with me...:D
Does the SS affect hiss and grounding noise as well?

Unfortunately, it does not affect grounding noise. My house is rather poorly grounded, and when I play with distortion and especially reverb, I tend to get significant grounding noise. The SS does not mitigate the grounding noise at all.
 

lumberjack

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 2, 2006
Messages
2,987
Location
Toronto, Canada
The Silent Circuit has a small "dummy coil" inside and an op amp to buffer that coil's signal. The dummy coil picks up background noise regardless of what frequency it is. 50 Hz, 60 Hz, doesn't matter. This signal is then buffered internally and subtracted from you guitar's signal, so you hear less noise. It's generally only wired up to single coils or MM90s, there's no reason to have it wired up to a humbucker (unless it was particularly noisy, in which case you could actually do it.)

Brian- the inductor's signal is fed to an op-amp inside the little device. The output of this is then fed to the ground of the pickups. When you take the battery out, the output of the op-amp is effectively at ground so there is no contribution from the coil or the other circuitry in the Silent Circuit. So that effectively removes it from the circuit. You can try taking it out it to see. Or easy way to prove it is to actually ground the negative leads of the pickups (you could do this with alligator clips so as to avoid soldering).

I like these little guys so much I've actually put them in other guitars (including my Morse and Y2D).

Hey Beej, are the silent circuits you put in your other guitars direct from Ernie Ball, or did you buy them after market somewhere else?
 

beej

Moderator
Joined
Aug 16, 2004
Messages
12,243
Location
Toronto, Canada
After market, EBMM doesn't sell them separately, except as replacements. Craigslist, eBay and a helpful forumite who was done with his ;)

If you have a trem, another option is the Suhr Backplate. That thing works phenomenally, though it's pricey. More of a loop antenna than a dummy coil and it's passive so no need to worry about a battery.
 

58super

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 20, 2006
Messages
532
Location
Mississauga, Ontario
Hey Beej,

Thanks for the explanation.:cool:

The AL middle pickup is reverse wound and attaches to separate lead of the silent circuit.

If you replace this pickup with non reverse wound pickup would you connect it to the same lead to the silent circuit as the other 2 pickups and adjust the trim pot on top for minimum hum or should it be connected to the original lead?

Thanks again.

Cheers,
David
 
Last edited:

Brian G

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 26, 2006
Messages
65
Location
Victoria, BC
Beej - thanks for the in-depth explanation. It sounds like you've experimented with the SS in and out of circuit? If so, did you notice any affect on the highs with the SS in-circuit?

Thanks again for the enlightening comments.

Brian
 

Ripper

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 6, 2006
Messages
1,093
Location
Singapore
Beej - thanks for the in-depth explanation. It sounds like you've experimented with the SS in and out of circuit? If so, did you notice any affect on the highs with the SS in-circuit?

Thanks again for the enlightening comments.

Brian

Hey Brian, if I'm not wrong, Beej has done a silent circuit and piezo mod on his morse! Check out his pics..
 

beej

Moderator
Joined
Aug 16, 2004
Messages
12,243
Location
Toronto, Canada
If you replace this pickup with non reverse wound pickup would you connect it to the same lead to the silent circuit as the other 2 pickups and adjust the trim pot on top for minimum hum or should it be connected to the original lead?
The SC has a regular output (blue) and an inverting output (voilet) for RWRP pickups. So yeah, if you replace the middle with a non RWRP pickup then just wire its ground to the blue.

Unfortunately there's just one trimpot so you can't tweak it for each pickup. You have to find the best balance that works for all three, or pick the one that matters most and aim to reduce it's hum. Sometimes it'll get them all, with other pickups it doesn't work as well.

Beej - thanks for the in-depth explanation. It sounds like you've experimented with the SS in and out of circuit? If so, did you notice any affect on the highs with the SS in-circuit?
Yeah, I've experimented both ways. To my ears there is no loss of fidelity, no missing highs from the signal. It's just about hum removal. Electronically it makes sense- from the SC you get a low impedance signal that doesn't load the pickups in any way. That keeps the character of their sound in tact. All it's doing is adding in inverted hum which gets removed from the signal.

There's been talk about people hearing a difference, but from what I can tell it's just the psychological effect of a quieter signal that people are reacting to. There's no real tonal change.

FYI, when I put them in my Morse/Y2D I wired them up for the singles and on a coil split. So when I split the HBs in the Morse they are pretty darn quiet :)
 

58super

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 20, 2006
Messages
532
Location
Mississauga, Ontario
The SC has a regular output (blue) and an inverting output (voilet) for RWRP pickups. So yeah, if you replace the middle with a non RWRP pickup then just wire its ground to the blue.

Unfortunately there's just one trimpot so you can't tweak it for each pickup. You have to find the best balance that works for all three, or pick the one that matters most and aim to reduce it's hum. Sometimes it'll get them all, with other pickups it doesn't work as well.


Thanks Beej.

I can get more quack and less hum!:cool::D

David
 

lumberjack

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 2, 2006
Messages
2,987
Location
Toronto, Canada
After market, EBMM doesn't sell them separately, except as replacements. Craigslist, eBay and a helpful forumite who was done with his ;)

If you have a trem, another option is the Suhr Backplate. That thing works phenomenally, though it's pricey. More of a loop antenna than a dummy coil and it's passive so no need to worry about a battery.

Cool! Thanks for the info.:D
 

whitestrat

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 13, 2007
Messages
2,589
Location
The Little Red Dot
The Silent Circuit has a small "dummy coil" inside and an op amp to buffer that coil's signal. The dummy coil picks up background noise regardless of what frequency it is. 50 Hz, 60 Hz, doesn't matter. This signal is then buffered internally and subtracted from you guitar's signal, so you hear less noise. It's generally only wired up to single coils or MM90s, there's no reason to have it wired up to a humbucker (unless it was particularly noisy, in which case you could actually do it.)

Thanks Beej! Explains a lot!

So, this means, that for a HSS Silo Spec, only the 2 Singles are connected, and I only have to tweak the switch to match the humbucker noise level?:confused:
 
Top Bottom