The Seymour Duncan Liberator Solderless Potentiometer 250k is a solderless pickup change system.
The
volume potentiometer is the tone junction for your guitar's wiring.
Swap it out for Liberator and you'll be able to quickly and easily
change pickups for new tone, feel, responsiveness, and output.
Liberator
is an integrated quality volume pot and screw-clamp connector that
accepts bare or tinned pickup leads for torqued-tight tone better than
flimsy spring terminals or less-than-perfect solder connections.
Technical Details
With a Liberator installed in place of a volume pot, changing pickups
becomes fast, easy, and solder-free, but just as reliable. In fact,
it's more reliable than a less-than-perfect solder joint. You simply
insert the bare end of each pickup lead into one of Liberator's pickup
connector stations and tighten the screw-clamp to lock it down. Turning
the screw lifts up a carriage that locks the wire against a fixed pad,
securing the connection in place. It's completely simple, and
completely solid.
For
experienced guitar techs, Liberator makes pickup changes much faster
and simpler, but with the solid, reliable connections of the Lockdown
system.
For those who have never soldered before, Liberator
opens up a world of tone exploration. You'll be able to easily explore
how different pickups change how your instrument sounds and responds in
ways that will inspire your playing and enhance your personal voice.
Parts of the Liberator
Liberator is like a studio patch bay, where connections that can be
easily but securely exchanged up front correspond to hard-wired
connections behind the scenes.
There
are two main parts to the Liberator System: the ten-station pickup
connector, and four-station potentiometer connector. The wire colors
adjacent to the pickup connector indicate which color wires you should
install in each connector station. This is according to Seymour
Duncan's wiring scheme for four-conductor humbuckers, but Liberator
comes with a color-code guide for easily connecting other
manufacturer's pickups.
The potentiometer connector stations
correspond to the three terminals on a potentiometer-in, out, and
ground-plus an additional ground for bridges or tremolo systems. For
those who prefer to solder, there are optional gold-plated solder pads
adjacent to the potentiometer connector, plus seven gold-plated oval
solder pads that go to ground. These pads are much easier to solder
than the back of a potentiometer.
Liberator Versions
Liberator with Volume Pot comes in 250k and 500k versions. (Warmer 250k
pots are typically used to tame the brightness of single-coil pickups,
while brighter 500k pots are typically used with humbuckers.)