Cleaning Emmons Volume Pedal Pot
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Boo Bernstein
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Cleaning Emmons Volume Pedal Pot
I know this has been asked many times, but I can't seem to find any of the specific posts about this. I have an Emmons volume pedal that I haven't used for a while and it has become scratchy. I know the pots are sealed but it seems like I've read on the Forum about ways to get cleaner into them. Can someone please help me? Thanks, Boo
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John Daugherty
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The only way I know to clean them is, take the pot out,remove the back cover from the pot and spray the resistance element with contact cleaner. You don't have to remove the wires. Just get the pot in a position so you can bend back the tabs which hold the cover on the pot. You will probably have to slide the pulley off of the pot.
I have never seen the inside of an Emmons pedal, but I assume it is about the same as Goodrich and others.
Just today I cleaned a Clarostat pot in a Goodrich. It took about 20 minutes.
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I have never seen the inside of an Emmons pedal, but I assume it is about the same as Goodrich and others.
Just today I cleaned a Clarostat pot in a Goodrich. It took about 20 minutes.
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Jay Ganz
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Boo,
I found this topic in a search.
Does the author look familiar?
http://steelguitarforum.com/Forum11/HTML/007898.html
<font face=radagund><font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Jay Ganz on 24 June 2006 at 06:23 PM.]</p></FONT>
I found this topic in a search.
Does the author look familiar?
http://steelguitarforum.com/Forum11/HTML/007898.html
<font face=radagund><font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Jay Ganz on 24 June 2006 at 06:23 PM.]</p></FONT>
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Jim Sliff
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Everything sounds great except this:
"spray the resistance element with contact cleaner."
You should NEVER use contact *cleaner* on a pot or switch, ever. Only use "cleaner/lubricant" types. The "cleaners" remove all the lubricating oils and your pot will be totally destroyed in a matter of an hour or so of use.
Caig Pro Gold is a good product; there are others as well. But again - a cleaner alone should NEVER be used.
And WD-40 is not a guitar-related item. At all. For anything. Period.

"spray the resistance element with contact cleaner."
You should NEVER use contact *cleaner* on a pot or switch, ever. Only use "cleaner/lubricant" types. The "cleaners" remove all the lubricating oils and your pot will be totally destroyed in a matter of an hour or so of use.
Caig Pro Gold is a good product; there are others as well. But again - a cleaner alone should NEVER be used.
And WD-40 is not a guitar-related item. At all. For anything. Period.
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Boo Bernstein
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Boo Bernstein
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As long as I'm asking questions about the Emmons volume pedal ... two Emmons pedals have Clarostat pots, Type EJ -- there is the number EJAIN116P504A ... but under two of them there is a number: 9225. The third one (that doesn't sound as good)says 9614 under the other number. Does anyone know the difference or what these numbers mean? Thanks, Boo
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James Cann
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Boo Bernstein
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Mike Fried
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John Daugherty
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Jim, the contact cleaners I use, leave a protective coating that prevents oxidation and "junk" buildup. I was probably using these before you were born. I have had an excellent success rate with repairing noisy pots.
If the contact cleaner contains a lot of "junk" additives, it will collect trash the same way WD-40 does.
The "junk" that was on the new control collects trash which causes noise. That is the reason I remove it.
We all have different theories. I'm sticking with the solution that has worked for me for years. I clean pots in equipment, daily, in my repair business.
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If the contact cleaner contains a lot of "junk" additives, it will collect trash the same way WD-40 does.
The "junk" that was on the new control collects trash which causes noise. That is the reason I remove it.
We all have different theories. I'm sticking with the solution that has worked for me for years. I clean pots in equipment, daily, in my repair business.
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Donny Hinson
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The "protective lubricant" used is now liquid silicone, almost exclusively. Pots have a pair of wipers (contact fingers, really) near the center, just inside of the resistive element. Sometimes, it's not the resistive element or wiper-block, but these fingers that get dirty and make the noise. Spray the whole inside of the pot to get <u>all</u> the dirt out, and leave a good coating lubricant. Also remember to lube the shaft (where it enters the bushing) about once a year with some light "3 in 1", or a similar oil.
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Jim Sliff
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"Jim, the contact cleaners I use, leave a protective coating that prevents oxidation and "junk" buildup."
That's the type of stuff I meant. I've never seen one labeled "contact cleaner" though - they always add "lubricant" or "conditioner" in there somewhere, if they have a lubricant.
I was just warning against the use of the "cleaner-only" types, which will destroy a pot in nothing flat.
That's the type of stuff I meant. I've never seen one labeled "contact cleaner" though - they always add "lubricant" or "conditioner" in there somewhere, if they have a lubricant.
I was just warning against the use of the "cleaner-only" types, which will destroy a pot in nothing flat.
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John Daugherty
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Yes, Jim, There are many cleaners called "contact cleaner". Some are cleaner/silicone mixture as Donny pointed out. You have to read the fine print to see what it contains. They could leave the "contact" off the name and call it "cleaner" and we would be less confused.
I have tried some cleaners that left so much sticky-goo on the surface that they worked like a dirt trap. Thanks to everyones help, I think Bob has a good idea of how to clean the pot by now.
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I have tried some cleaners that left so much sticky-goo on the surface that they worked like a dirt trap. Thanks to everyones help, I think Bob has a good idea of how to clean the pot by now. ------------------
www.home.earthlink.net/~johnd37
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Boo Bernstein
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