Originally posted by Mike Sulzer
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And there are bound to be some additional small physical effects that are not accounted for.
But how much do the two effects found in this work matter? When the pickup is loaded by the cable capacitance, the peak comes way down in frequency. How bad is the simple model in this case? It would be interesting if part of the difference in the sound between pickups using steel cores and those using alnico magnets as cores is the differences in the shapes of the frequency response curves due to differences in these subtle eddy current effects. But this is certainly not obvious, and it would not be so easy to show that it is true.
But how much do the two effects found in this work matter? When the pickup is loaded by the cable capacitance, the peak comes way down in frequency. How bad is the simple model in this case? It would be interesting if part of the difference in the sound between pickups using steel cores and those using alnico magnets as cores is the differences in the shapes of the frequency response curves due to differences in these subtle eddy current effects. But this is certainly not obvious, and it would not be so easy to show that it is true.
To avoid the subjectivity of human hearing, a standard approach is to show that the model errors are less than the scatter in the properties of pickups in this case, so there is no point in doing a better job.
You are making such an argument above, but the classic rejoinder to the last sentence is to assert that in fact people can hear such differences, so the model isn't yet good enough. This quickly becomes circular. Which leads us into double-blind testing.
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