I ve marked the capacitor wires in blue and given a top and bottom view of the wiring setup it s a fairly standard setup and even though yours may appear a bit different the capacitor tone pot are likely the same.
Guitar tone capacitor voltage.
Typically a cap with a voltage rating of 5v or higher will work in a guitar but the user will likely not notice any tonal difference between a cap rated at 5v and another rated at 600v.
The tone pot works in conjunction with the tone capacitor cap to serve as an adjustable high frequency drain for the signal produced by the pickups.
For tone caps and how this influences the tone.
The smaller the capacitor like 022 015 or less the less the treble is removed this is because the filter frequency shifts higher so more high frequency remains.
So all we need to.
The voltage produced by the pickups input voltage is connected between the volume pot terminals 1 and 3 while the guitar s output jack output voltage is connected between terminals 1.
Voltage rating one of my all time favorite urban legends has to do with voltage ratings.
The voltage rating describes the maximum working voltage of a cap potential measured in volts.
This component is usually attached to your tone control and it s the only difference between the tone control and the volume control.
Lucky for all of us voltage only plays into the physical size of a capacitor and has little to no effect on the actual sound of a cap.
The easiest way to think of a tone capacitor is that in the typical tone circuit they are a high frequency removal device.
You can read about voltage ratings of 400 volts and higher.
One end soldered to the pot s arm and the second leg is soldered to the bottom of the pot or somewhere else in the ground circuit.