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  • Sterling by MusicMan

FarrisGoldstein

New member
Joined
Oct 9, 2012
Messages
4
I have an SUB Sterling I bought about 8 years ago (I think). SN: X10526. Black head & body, silver diamond plate pickguard.

I've always liked the way this thing plays, but the pickup (or more likely the active preamp) is very noisy. If I turn down the first volume knob about half-way, I can get rid of most of the noise, but I also lose quite a lot of punch.

Is this common? Is there anything I can do to kill the noise?
 

FarrisGoldstein

New member
Joined
Oct 9, 2012
Messages
4
Yeah, it's the High EQ knob. I'll call CS and see if they can offer any help. I still play the thing live, but for recording our engineer (also our singer) just can't handle the hum.
 

Gravesend Black

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Joined
Jun 13, 2012
Messages
427
Yeah, it's the High EQ knob. I'll call CS and see if they can offer any help. I still play the thing live, but for recording our engineer (also our singer) just can't handle the hum.

I have the same problem with my SR5. Please PM me if you will find out something.
 

FarrisGoldstein

New member
Joined
Oct 9, 2012
Messages
4
Called CS. After some troubleshooting, they think I might need to replace the preamp. I've tested the grounding as best I can, and everything off-board seems to be grounded properly. My fear is that I'll pay for a replacement preamp and still have the hum.
 

tbonesullivan

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Joined
Aug 24, 2012
Messages
2,411
Location
New Jersey
are you sure all the coils are working correctly? I have found that tapping is hard to use as a method for telling which coils are on. taking a piece of wound guitar/bass string and scratching it with a fingernail directly over the pole piece seems to be a much more accurate method.
 

georgestrings

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 22, 2011
Messages
72
FWIW, I also have a SUB Sterling, and it doesn't have any of the noise you described - so I'm sure it's something that can be fixed... I'd pull out the pickups and make sure there aren't any issues in there before buying a preamp - it's actually 2 separate single coils that are jumped in parallel, in a single housing...


- georgestrings
 
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