It seems both interesting and confusing. But in the right project beast, this could be a hoot.
http://www.stewmac.com/Pickups_and_Electronics/Components_and_Parts/Capacitors_and_Resistors/G-HUB.html?lac_guid=4ec379ca-91e6-e411-b94e-bc305bee17b9&utm_campaign=EPA_M5065_C_20150420&utm_medium=email&utm_source=EPA#details
Quote from: eb2 on April 20, 2015, 09:07:32 AM
It seems both interesting and confusing. But in the right project beast, this could be a hoot.
http://www.stewmac.com/Pickups_and_Electronics/Components_and_Parts/Capacitors_and_Resistors/G-HUB.html?lac_guid=4ec379ca-91e6-e411-b94e-bc305bee17b9&utm_campaign=EPA_M5065_C_20150420&utm_medium=email&utm_source=EPA#details
Yes, but I'm not going there. Definitely for the mad scientist in training!
Four strings, one pup, one v-pot... does the job for me these days... ;)
Yes, it looks like for someone building an elaborate system (active?) it could be helpful, but for a passive system it looks like killing a fly with an elephant gun.
I don't think it has anything to do with passive vs. active. It's just a way to wire a bunch of different options. Overkill for anything I'd be interested in.
If I get around to building my glow in the dark EB3 I might throw that in.
Is that with modern products or the proper radioactive stuff...?