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| | #1 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 124
| Pickup Building - The Hard Way
Thought you guys might find this amusing. I love this guys ingenuity. There's a sound sample of the pickups at the bottom of the second page. I think they sound pretty good! http://galileo.spaceports.com/~fishb...ck/humbuck.htm |
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| | #2 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 136
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That would be the log cabin approach.
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| | #3 |
| Pickup Maker Join Date: May 2006 Location: Montclair, NJ
Posts: 5,612
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He goes through all that to make a counter, and then uses a hand crank drill....
__________________ Those who create are rare; those who cannot are numerous. Therefore, the latter are stronger. - Coco Chanel www.sgd-lutherie.com www.myspace.com/sgdlutherie www.myspace.com/davidschwab |
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| | #4 |
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 1,124
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I make and have made all of mine in a similarly crude way, only I don't even use a counter. Hand drill, clamped to the bench, spool of wire on the ground and a piece of paper and pencil on the counter.
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| | #5 |
| Pickup Maker Join Date: May 2006 Location: Montclair, NJ
Posts: 5,612
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My very first winder was a sewing machine motor screwed down to a phenolic base that had two L brackets on it that seemed to have been made to hold a roll of something (my dad found the thing somewhere). I made a bobbin holder by cutting one of those fiberglass snack trays up into 2 circles, with screws and nuts to hold the bobbin between them, and a metal coat hander, plastic straw, and a rubber band. The plastic drinking straw went through the bobbin holder, which spun on the coat hanger wire mounted on the L brackets, and the rubber band was used for a drive belt. No counter though. I just wound and then took a reading with my analog meter kit I got from radio shack (the light blue one). I think that was 1974 or so.
__________________ Those who create are rare; those who cannot are numerous. Therefore, the latter are stronger. - Coco Chanel www.sgd-lutherie.com www.myspace.com/sgdlutherie www.myspace.com/davidschwab |
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| | #6 |
| Old Timer Join Date: May 2006 Location: Planet Mongo in the country of PAF
Posts: 3,139
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I have alot of respect for that guy doing what he did, what a cool guy. If he ever got into making pickups he would be someone to watch. When you learn to make pickups the hard way from scratch you learn a helluva lot more than buying SM kits, throwing one together and becoming an instant pickup genius. I am really thankful for Lollar's book being available when it was and that he helped me through figuring out his book, if I ran a pickup making school I would start students the same way his book does, by making pickups from scratch, its a valuable skill you'll always use....
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| | #7 | |
| Pickup Maker Join Date: May 2006 Location: Montclair, NJ
Posts: 5,612
| Quote:
__________________ Those who create are rare; those who cannot are numerous. Therefore, the latter are stronger. - Coco Chanel www.sgd-lutherie.com www.myspace.com/sgdlutherie www.myspace.com/davidschwab | |
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| | #8 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 124
| Quote:
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| | #9 |
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 1,124
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Jon/John Tirone/Fisher (same guy, two names) has made a bunch of things and posted snapshot diaries of them on-line, including archtops and other musical devices of surprising beauty and quality.
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| | #10 |
| Junior Member Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Detroit
Posts: 1
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I used that guys page about a year ago to make my first pickup every... only mine involved popsicle sticks and gorilla glue. I also wound it by hand using recycled wire from an old pickup. The funniest part is that is actually worked |
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| | #11 |
| Senior Member |
Awhy, with common nails as pole pieces, and fridge magnets? Someone found a guy with a similar build a while back, many chuckled at how crude the process was, yet most agreed that the pickups sounded pretty good. They were installed in a bass, iirc.
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| | #12 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 844
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His sound byte sounds pretty good too, specially considering the rudementary tooling he used to produce the pickups.
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