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JOIN THE DISCORD VIEW THREADDefinitely! As long as you don't damage the copper wiring (which should be under some protective tape) or the wires that you solder to the volume/tone pots which isn't easy to do as long as you watch what you're doing/go into it knowing what to do. I've seen videos of Ryan Bruce from Riffs Beards and Gear install and remove 4 or 5 different pickups into 1 guitar to test out how different certain pickups can sound/affect your tone.If you upgrade the humbucker on the beginner guitar, could you take it out again later and put it in another guitar? I'm scared to test it cause I only got 1 guitar.
I should probably practice connecting stuff first. There was some tin that came with the solder machine, I tried to mix it with copper from my speaker. The tip has tin all over it, do I need a new tip? Getting copper stuff to melt if I can find it.Definitely! As long as you don't damage the copper wiring (which should be under some protective tape) or the wires that you solder to the volume/tone pots which isn't easy to do as long as you watch what you're doing/go into it knowing what to do. I've seen videos of Ryan Bruce from Riffs Beards and Gear install and remove 4 or 5 different pickups into 1 guitar to test out how different certain pickups can sound/affect your tone.
I should probably practice connecting stuff first. There was some tin that came with the solder machine, I tried to mix it with copper from my speaker. The tip has tin all over it, do I need a new tip? Getting copper stuff to melt if I can find it.
So it's ok to use Tin on Copper wires? I don't know what color the wires are inside my guitar, my speaker had bronze colored and I put Tin on it. I'll check out videos for sure, I'm not wanting to mess up my guitar anytime soon. There's like a globe of solid Tin on the tip, I did everything I wasn't suppose to do on my first attempt.You do not want the copper to melt at all. You want the tin to melt and solidify the electrical connection between the two pieces of copper or the copper and the metal of the connector on the pot. Please read and watch videos (or watch someone do it in front of you) before you attempt to solder. It's actually not easy to learn and if you don't do it 100% right, it can really make the guitar sound terrible.
Tin on the soldering iron is fine. Don't touch the hot part.
Solder is always a tin-based alloy, yes - it melts quickly, cools fast, and conducts electricity.So it's ok to use Tin on Copper wires? I don't know what color the wires are inside my guitar, my speaker had bronze colored and I put Tin on it. I'll check out videos for sure, I'm not wanting to mess up my guitar anytime soon. There's like a globe of solid Tin on the tip, I did everything I wasn't suppose to do on my first attempt.