Eliminate hum, noise, and mud from your guitar's internal electronics so your direct recordings are clean, dynamic, and professional.

Direct recording exposes every flaw in your guitar's electronics. Hum, crackle, thin tone, and mud all become painfully obvious once you bypass the amp and go straight into an interface.
Over the years I've developed a reliable set of modifications that dramatically improve clarity and reduce noise without killing the soul of the instrument.
Cheap paint-on shielding or minimal foil does almost nothing. I use high-quality self-adhesive copper foil tape covering every cavity surface with generous overlap and good contact to the ground. I also shield the control cavity and pickup routes thoroughly. This alone drops noise floor dramatically when tracking direct.
Stock ceramic or cheap film caps are often microphonic and dull. I replace them with Orange Drop or Mallory 150 capacitors. The difference in clarity, especially on the tone control, is immediately noticeable in recordings. I usually go with 0.022µF or 0.047µF depending on the guitar and desired roll-off character.
For humbuckers I often wire for coil-splitting with a push-pull pot or mini-toggle. I also like adding a series/parallel switch on the bridge pickup for extra versatility. Treble bleed circuits (specific resistor + cap values) keep the tone from getting dark when rolling back the volume — essential for recording dynamics.
These modifications are relatively inexpensive but deliver outsized improvements in recording quality. Once you experience a properly shielded, well-capped guitar going direct, you’ll never want to record a noisy instrument again.