There is no good evidence that any physical ground loops in guitars are noise-producing. Either by different earth potentials at different points in the loop (obligatory for current to flow to produce noise) or induction. It's easy to test say in a Les Paul - link all four pot body grounds in a loop, listen to the noise floor, then cut one loop and see if it changes the noise floor. It's annoying when supposedly reputable sources like Fralin just say on their website 'don't create ground loops' yet refuse to prove that it matters when challenged.madlovepickups wrote: ↑Fri May 05, 2023 3:25 pmIt is also possible to over shield. By providing multiple paths to ground from the same point you can introduce ground loops, more of an issue with active electronics but it’s worth making sure that grounded components only have a single path to ground either through your shielding or through a wire, not both.
In jaguars, Fender seems to toss a coin on whether they use pot-body to pot-body wired grounds for the controls on the metal control plate or not - which means some guitars have physical ground loops and some don't. For example the Am Pro jag has wired pot body grounds on the control plate (top below); the Vintera 60s does not (bottom below). The plate of course has the output jack socket, the grounded rim of which grounds the plate when the (grounded) jack is inserted. Thus the pot bodies on the plate are also grounded. So any connecting wire between the pot bodies is essentially redundant. Where Fender does add a ground wire between pot bodies they have effectively created a physical ground loop (potbody1->wire->potbody2->plate->potbody1). But it doesn't matter.
American Pro jag - pot bodies on plate wired together ...

Vintera 60s jag - pot bodies on plate not wired together ...
