Okay, I know most people would tell me it is easy to work out when a pickup is faulty.
I had a magnetic pickup from an acoustic guitar to look at. I thought the volume and tone controls on this pickup looked rather fragile so it is probable that I will find damaged pots.
This wasn't the case at all if fact, next I wired the pickup directly to a jack and the only time I heard a peep from the pickup was when I touched the steel base plate (like a Tele pickup.)
Next came the Fluke 77 multimeter, it told me the pickups resistance was 7.7K, I thought this would be typical of a single coil pickup used for this application.
I even made sure there was a magnetic field from the bar magnet at the core of the windings.
So why would it measure 7.7K and I'm not hearing a peep from it?
Yours Sincerely
Mark Abbott
I had a magnetic pickup from an acoustic guitar to look at. I thought the volume and tone controls on this pickup looked rather fragile so it is probable that I will find damaged pots.
This wasn't the case at all if fact, next I wired the pickup directly to a jack and the only time I heard a peep from the pickup was when I touched the steel base plate (like a Tele pickup.)
Next came the Fluke 77 multimeter, it told me the pickups resistance was 7.7K, I thought this would be typical of a single coil pickup used for this application.
I even made sure there was a magnetic field from the bar magnet at the core of the windings.
So why would it measure 7.7K and I'm not hearing a peep from it?
Yours Sincerely
Mark Abbott
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