Got this pickups for rewinds.It has two alnico magnets waxed into the middle of an aircoil.Came with a closed nicklesilver cover.Would lioke to know about winding specs.Thanks
db
No,
it is not from europe.
The owner told me it came out of an old epiphone.It is made out of american materials.It is wound with Plain enamel and has a singlebraided wire alike my old PAT mini humbuckers wich is a bit smaller in diameter than the full size PAF style humbucker wire..The nickle silver cover is made simple but does not look homebrewed.
cheers
db
The owner told me it came out of an old epiphone. It is made out of american materials. It is wound with Plain enamel and has a singlebraided wire alike my old PAT mini humbuckers which is a bit smaller in diameter than the full size PAF style humbucker wire.
If you can measure the DC resistance (assuming the coil isn't open), the physical dimensions of the coil, and the wire guage, it is possible to estimate the number of turns. If it's an open circuit, getting most of the wax out and weighing the coil on a precision scale ought to get you close.
Or you can slowly unwind it on a winder and and see how many turns there were.
The nickel silver cover is made simple but does not look homebrewed.
In the photo it looks like scratched chrome or nickel plate. Nickel silver is a very soft metal, like brass, and so when worn looks almost frosted.
It is an Epiphone pickup. It's a pre-New Yorker without adjustable poles. They were badly microphonic so you can see why someone has wax potted it. There should be some plastic trim over those 'ears' where the screws hold them down to the guitar body.
According to this website, it's a 1950 non-adjustable NewYork Century pickup.
Attached Files
It would be possible to describe everything scientifically, but it would make no sense; it would be without meaning, as if you described a Beethoven symphony as a variation of wave pressure. — Albert Einstein
Thanks for the info !
I did not have to rewind the pickup.I found that the start of the coil was broken off its ground conection.
Had to get rid of the wax before I cound see.So I could save the old coil.
Funny thing is : the bottomplate were the coil is rested is made from magnetic steel.The cover is made from non ferrous nickle silver.
Funny thing is : the bottomplate were the coil is rested is made from magnetic steel.The cover is made from non ferrous nickle silver.
That's how the old Burns Trisonics are too. They use a ceramic magnet sitting on a steel plate with a bobbin-less coil. It's probably a little more efficient that way since the steel plate helps direct the magnetic field.
Leo Fender did the same thing with the G&L pickups, except he made the steel plate into a U shape to direct the bottom pole up to the strings.
It would be possible to describe everything scientifically, but it would make no sense; it would be without meaning, as if you described a Beethoven symphony as a variation of wave pressure. — Albert Einstein
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