|  |     
    
    		Some of the Carvin guitar models are wired for stereo.
    	The output jack toward the neck or the inside jack is only used
    	when running stereo. Use the outside jack for "normal" playing,
    	ie. both pickups, one cord. 
    
    	Hope this helps,
    	DonH
    
    
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|  |         Thanks Don. I got curious last night and pulled the two rear
        covers to make  a wiring diagram.  Turns out it's wired not for
        stereo, but to put  the  6 on one jack and the 12 on the other,
        OR,  if you connect only  to  the  rear  jack,  you  get  both,
        selected by the neck selector switch.  The problem was that the
        dual jack switch was not making good contact, which was why the
        output was distorted.
        
        Andy
        
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|  |     re:.0
    
    > Each neck has three x two  position  switches  (ignoring the
    > neck/bridge selector and the neck changeover switch).  Why three?  Is 
    > it  possible that two of the switches are series/parallel and the third
    > is pickup phase? 
    
    That's pretty much it.  It's a standard Carvin configuration.
    
    Two of the switches are coil taps for the pickups (single coil vs.
    double coil).
    
    The third switch determines whether the two pickups are in phase
    WITH EACH OTHER or out of phase with each other.  Thus, for the most
    part (I'll explain the exception later) it only works when both
    pickups are selected.
    
    This configuration was one of the main reasons I bought my Carvin.
    It's very simple and intuitive (unlike my other guitar: Steve Morse
    model) and I can get a very wide variety of sounds including good
    approximations of all the standards (strat, LP, Tele and to a lesser
    extent, 335).
    
    The wiring is pretty clever too although I can't really type in
    a complete description.  But one aspect of it is that when the
    bridge pickup is in single-coil mode, the phase selector switch 
    determines WHICH of the two coils is used (basically one is wired
    in phase with the other pickup, one is wired out of phase).
    
    But what that means is the phase switch has an effect not only when
    both pickups are selected, it also has an effect when only the bridge
    pickup is selected:  it determines which of the two coils is used.
    
    The bridge pickup is mounted very close to the bridge, and thus you DO
    get a different tone based on which coil is used because there are
    distinctive differences in tone between SMALL distances from the
    bridge, but as you go further and further away from the bridge,
    small differences in distances aren't as distinctive.
    
    I really think this is a VERY nice configuration and I'm so used to
    it that I flick these switches around and get what I want almost
    without being conscious of doing it.
    
    	db
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