I recorded some samples of plucking the G and D strings of a Strat, with the pickups at two heights, 3mm and 6mm, with the intention of doing a frequency analysis to determine which frequency ranges were more or less emphasized.
The results of the frequency analysis were rather ambiguous, but I did notice something else when looking at the raw amplitudes in the DAW, and that is that when the pickups were set to 3mm distance (in green), the amplitude over time showed a greater tendency to favor either the positive or the negative at different times, in an oscillating fashion, so that the end result is that it looks somewhat like a snake with a waving tail, where as the 6mm distant waveform (in purple) looks a lot more uniform in the positive in negative side, with a more linear downward slope as the energy in the string decays.
Any idea why this would be? I realize that the string's pattern of movement is not perfectly uniform in general, that the ratio of vertical to horizontal movement changes as the string vibrates, which probably explains why the amplitude is not a perfect slope, but what I don't understand is why having the pickup mounted closer to the string exaggerates that non-linearity in the positive to negative ratio (such that it looks more snake like).
Here's my theory: we know voltage is created when the flux density changes in the coil, so my thinking is that when the pickup is closer to the string, there is sharper magnetic focus upon the string, so that when the string is further "off center", to the left or the right of the pole piece, it experiences a proportionately sharper drop in flux, where as when the pickup is further away, and the flux is more spread out, so there is not as proportionately large of drop in flux as the string moves "off axis". The greater disproportion in flux density imparted upon the string as the string moves in and out of a tighter area of flux would cause greater degrees of amplitude variation as the string's vibration evolves from being more horizontal to more vertical, and back again. I'm not super confident this is what is going on, though.
I'd be interested to know if anyone has a theory as to how that snake-like amplitude pattern comes about when the pickup is closer to the strings.
The results of the frequency analysis were rather ambiguous, but I did notice something else when looking at the raw amplitudes in the DAW, and that is that when the pickups were set to 3mm distance (in green), the amplitude over time showed a greater tendency to favor either the positive or the negative at different times, in an oscillating fashion, so that the end result is that it looks somewhat like a snake with a waving tail, where as the 6mm distant waveform (in purple) looks a lot more uniform in the positive in negative side, with a more linear downward slope as the energy in the string decays.
Any idea why this would be? I realize that the string's pattern of movement is not perfectly uniform in general, that the ratio of vertical to horizontal movement changes as the string vibrates, which probably explains why the amplitude is not a perfect slope, but what I don't understand is why having the pickup mounted closer to the string exaggerates that non-linearity in the positive to negative ratio (such that it looks more snake like).
Here's my theory: we know voltage is created when the flux density changes in the coil, so my thinking is that when the pickup is closer to the string, there is sharper magnetic focus upon the string, so that when the string is further "off center", to the left or the right of the pole piece, it experiences a proportionately sharper drop in flux, where as when the pickup is further away, and the flux is more spread out, so there is not as proportionately large of drop in flux as the string moves "off axis". The greater disproportion in flux density imparted upon the string as the string moves in and out of a tighter area of flux would cause greater degrees of amplitude variation as the string's vibration evolves from being more horizontal to more vertical, and back again. I'm not super confident this is what is going on, though.
I'd be interested to know if anyone has a theory as to how that snake-like amplitude pattern comes about when the pickup is closer to the strings.
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