I think the only valid claim might be the R/C network on the "large coil".
BTW, this does bring up one of the interesting issues with dummy coil hum canceling, and that is the role of the core of the coil both in terms of the inductive effect as well as the potential for capacitive coupling of induced electrostatic hum if the inner end of the coil is "hot". This was not a major issue for the Alembic system as we used ceramic magnet cores for the pickups and Plexiglas cores for the dummy coils...which were, by the way, rarely of never the same size as the pickup coils once we went with the active hum canceling system. So the whole idea of using different sized coils for pickup and hum canceling really goes back to 1972 or so. Prior to that, Alembic used a passive dummy coil per pickup with those coils being stashed in the electronics cavity. There are probably around 25 instruments that we made that way, including "the Pretzel guitar" that I made in 1969 which will be on exhibit at the Museum of Art and Design in New York in the fall of 2011.
As an aside, I see myself quoted elsewhere on the forum here re. potting coils. I've gone conventional now...vacuum wax potting. It works.
One other thing...I've just wound some pickups in both 40 and 44 gauge Teflon coated wire. Sounds good... No big deal to strip with some 220 sandpaper for soldering. Glad I bought it surplus by the pound, though; I checked prices...whew! Might have to save the stuff for exotic pickup winds.
BTW, this does bring up one of the interesting issues with dummy coil hum canceling, and that is the role of the core of the coil both in terms of the inductive effect as well as the potential for capacitive coupling of induced electrostatic hum if the inner end of the coil is "hot". This was not a major issue for the Alembic system as we used ceramic magnet cores for the pickups and Plexiglas cores for the dummy coils...which were, by the way, rarely of never the same size as the pickup coils once we went with the active hum canceling system. So the whole idea of using different sized coils for pickup and hum canceling really goes back to 1972 or so. Prior to that, Alembic used a passive dummy coil per pickup with those coils being stashed in the electronics cavity. There are probably around 25 instruments that we made that way, including "the Pretzel guitar" that I made in 1969 which will be on exhibit at the Museum of Art and Design in New York in the fall of 2011.
As an aside, I see myself quoted elsewhere on the forum here re. potting coils. I've gone conventional now...vacuum wax potting. It works.
One other thing...I've just wound some pickups in both 40 and 44 gauge Teflon coated wire. Sounds good... No big deal to strip with some 220 sandpaper for soldering. Glad I bought it surplus by the pound, though; I checked prices...whew! Might have to save the stuff for exotic pickup winds.
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