Since I'm little better than a monkey equipped with logic when it comes to wiring, I'd greatly appreciate anyone who could take the time to scrutinize this design and verify that it functions the way I'm hoping it will.

Thanks!
Jack
The diagram is actually specifying a 4-way switch (DP4T), which I haven't personally seen used before, but makes sense electrically.Shadoweclipse13 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 22, 2022 9:27 pmAre you using Seymour Duncan official coil split pickup ring for the P-Rails? I've never used one, but otherwise I've never seen a 3-way switch that has 10 lugs...
Ah! 4-way would make more sense. My bad! Haha.mbene085 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 22, 2022 10:40 pmThe diagram is actually specifying a 4-way switch (DP4T), which I haven't personally seen used before, but makes sense electrically.Shadoweclipse13 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 22, 2022 9:27 pmAre you using Seymour Duncan official coil split pickup ring for the P-Rails? I've never used one, but otherwise I've never seen a 3-way switch that has 10 lugs...
Thank you both for taking a look! No, I don't personally like the look of the Seymour Duncan pickup rings, and the binary tree switching they use seems unintuitive to me... I think the DP4T (on-on-on-on) 4-way slide switches make much more sense.mbene085 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 22, 2022 10:40 pmThe diagram is actually specifying a 4-way switch (DP4T), which I haven't personally seen used before, but makes sense electrically.Shadoweclipse13 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 22, 2022 9:27 pmAre you using Seymour Duncan official coil split pickup ring for the P-Rails? I've never used one, but otherwise I've never seen a 3-way switch that has 10 lugs...