April 2010 \ Tech Tips \ Mod Garage \ Tone Capacitors for Stratocasters, Part 1

Tone Capacitors for Stratocasters, Part 1

Dirk Wacker

A quick guide to vintage Strat caps - which ones to try, and what you should expect.


Premier Guitar April 2010

Hello, and welcome back to “Mod Garage.” Recently, I’ve received a lot of emails about tone caps for Stratocasters. I’ve discussed capacitors in general a few times before, and those earlier columns are a good place to start if you want to find out more about tone caps for guitars and how to determine the best value for you. Based on those, we’ll dig deeper into the subject, and concentrate on caps for Strats. I can give you advice about what to try based on my experience with different caps and Strats over the years, but there are no fixed rules. It’s your guitar and your sound, and there’s no law that says you can’t try whatever you want. Be brave and go wild, and maybe you’ll find something by accident that suits you exactly. One customer of mine uses only caps from a specific old German radio from the ‘50s. For him, it’s the perfect tone. If you have some old, obsolete electronic products in your cellar or attic, they’re a good source for some wild experiments. I received an email from a guy in Arkansas who opened up some old military stuff from the ‘50s and found tons of Sprague Bumblebee caps... some of them are now living their second life in his Les Paul and SG guitars, and providing superb tone.

In a nutshell, a capacitor is an electrical/ electronic device that stores energy in the electric field between a pair of conductors (called plates). The process of storing energy in the capacitor is known as charging, and involves electric charges of equal magnitude but opposite polarity building up on each plate. Capacitors are often used in electrical and electronic circuits as energy-storage devices. They can also be used to differentiate between high-frequency and low-frequency signals. This property makes them useful in electronic filters, and that’s exactly what we use them for in our guitars. Basically, our passive tone control can be used to dampen the high frequencies. When you close the tone pot, it rolls off the treble response, resulting in a more mellow tone. Adjusting this control affects the sound very noticeably, but it’s still recognizably the same guitar. As a basic rule, you could say the bigger the cap, the darker the tone. Depending on the cap’s value, or capacitance, the effect can go from slightly warmer (2200–6800pF) to a “woman tone” (0.01–0.047uF) up to completely dark and “clinically dead” (0.1uF and higher). Another thing to remember is that the tone cap is always part of the circuit and even influences the guitar’s tone when the tone pot is left fully open—that’s the reason the tone cap is such an important part of the sound.

Here are some caps you should try in your Strat:

Orange Drop
These legendary caps were formerly produced by Sprague. Today they’re made by the American company SBE, but with the same old machines and the original tooling of the golden days. They are film types, available in different voltage ratings, sizes, shapes and values. The typical Orange Drop caps we know of are used in high-quality tube amps, especially the 630V types. These have the most “Fendery” tone when used in a Strat: slightly scooped mids and a tight, percussive bass response great for clean playing (and overdrive too). There are several different series available. The most common ones available from guitar parts suppliers are the 715P and the higher-graded 716P series. Both are polypropylene film types. The 225P and the PS series are polyester film types. These are the ones you should try in your Strat. They sound even more “Fendery” than the 715P and 716P series. As a film cap, the Orange Drop caps are non-polarized, so their orientation makes no difference... at least it should make no difference, but that’s a subject for a later column.

Mallory 150
These axial-leaded polyester film caps, or “poly-film” caps, are easy to identify because of their bright yellow color, similar to the old Plessi caps you may know from the Music Man amps. The Mallory 150 caps are made by the Canadian company DuraCap. Because of the axial-leaded shape, they’re very easy to use in guitars. They sound very punchy with a good edge—a perfect Strat tone cap for blues and rock. With overdrive, they sound very mellow and musical. This cap works perfectly with single-coil pickups, but will work with humbuckers as well. If you want a modern, round tone, this is a cap you should try.

ERO Roederstein MKT1813
Made by Vishay, these are also axial-leaded polyester film caps, and they’re also yellow, but not as bright and shiny as the Mallory 150s. They have a very woody and transparent tone; in a Telecaster they can sometimes sound like an acoustic guitar. If your Strat has a very woody and resonant primary tone, this cap will bring it all to the surface when amplified.

NOS Styroflex caps
Often called “polystyrol” caps, you can find them easily on eBay today, even though they’re no longer in production. Polystyrene capacitors are best used for filters, timing circuits, feedback circuits and anywhere high stability and low leakage is important, but they also are great tone caps for guitars, amps and stompboxes. Polystyrene (PS, often called “Styroflex” or “styrol” in Europe) has long been the material of choice for critical analog circuits. Polystyrene caps are a perfect substitute for silver mica caps, but much smaller and easier to find in the typical values we use for guitars. If you want maximum transparency and no tone coloration at all, this is the type of cap you should try.

Next month we’ll talk about paper-in-oil caps, silver mica caps, tropical fish caps, paper waxed caps and the good ol’ NOS “high voltage” ceramic caps from the ‘50s and ‘60s. Until then... keep on modding!


Dirk Wacker
Dirk Wacker lives in Germany and has been addicted to all kinds of guitars since age five. He is fascinated by anything to do with old Fender guitars and amps. In his spare time he plays country, rockabilly, surf and Nashville styles in two bands, works part-time as a studio musician for a local studio and writes for several guitar mags. He is also a confessing hardcore DIY guy for guitars, amps and stompboxes and runs an extensive webpage, singlecoil.com, about these things.

     

Related Articles

Fighting Feedback in a Telecaster
Preparing Your Tele for Future Mods
Exploring Fender's 5-Way Super Switch
Stratocaster Q&A, 2011
Tone Capacitors for Stratocaster, Part 3


Comments

(12 comments) display by
UsernameComment
Dick Hyde
on 06/07/2013
Mallory 150 is a nice cap for amplifiers as well.
Pete
on 12/26/2012
Snake Oil.
Mister T
on 11/03/2012
Yeah different caps values and differnent cap TYPES make a huge difference to the sound. But lets not confuse frequency response with overall tone - most people listen for the wrong thing! Any tone cap with a higher value will drain off more treble - so a 0.047uf sounds way darker than a 0.022uf- but the cap type also affects the harmonics and the way the guitar "rings" when played. Thats what you need to listen for.

Don’t change your pickups yet! You can get Monster Tone with simple fitting components. You can buy different types on ebay uk to look for that Monster-tone, and experimentation is the thing! Monster-tone isn't hard and with a little patience you can find the tone you want. Video instructions for how to install tone caps can be found here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C2T7crN nOA8

The soldering principles apply for any tone cap and you can get Monstertone caps from well known sellers on eBay uk.


key
on 07/26/2012
Ack! I meant "you new CTS pots could have a different resistance value."
key
on 07/26/2012
Bowo: There are lots of things that could've made a difference there. Your new caps could be a different resistance value. A 250kohm pot is not usually exactly 250kohm… sometimes the cheaper ones are different by +/- 20%. The same goes for capacitors. Also, cleaner electronics can give you fewer problems. Usually everything sounds better to me when I replace old electronics. (;
bowo
on 07/24/2012
I swapped the electronics out of my strat, I put in new CTS fender pots, silver wire&solder connection, and an orange drop cap.. drastic difference! I'm so happy now.. Somehow the 'harsh' treble become 'sweeter' and I hear more clarity at the same time.. my tone pot react quite differently now, rolled off sound become slightly more 'organic' / 'woody'.. I swapped from cheap metalized polyester cap with the same value.. Yes, I think caps do make a difference!
Charles
on 07/14/2012
the colour, make or age can not influence the way a capacitor in an circuit audio sounds, only the value of the component or the resistance/impedance it is connected to can do that. your guitar will not sound better simply because you have a 20 year old orange capacitor in the tone control circuit. it seems people can convince themselves of anything with enough hype and mis-information. Bad science praying on peoples credulity.
speedy
on 04/12/2010
Check with "RS" Guitarworks. !
Dirk
on 04/10/2010
Hey Mike, in my older columns here you will find a lot about testing and installing tonecaps, so all you have to do is a search. In general replacing tonecaps is a simple 1:1 replacement process, just take the old one out of the guitar, and replace it with the new one, connected exactly like the old one.
Mike Bjorgo
on 04/09/2010
Dirk, How about something on the more basic side? Say, how to properly install the caps? I'm a newbie to this modding fun and prefer to do it right the first time.



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