Hi, I'm a longtime participant in other areas at this forum, and I've recently gotten into assembling parts guitars.
To learn more about guitar construction, I've been buying inexpensive Strats and copies thereof, taking them apart, modding them, reassembling, etc.
I'd not been a Strat player before getting into this construction/rescue Strat hobby a year or so ago.
One of the things I like about these cheapocasters is that they use a bar magnet and polepiece configuration, which seems to greatly reduce the dreaded string pull, or "stratitis."
The Cort/Mighty-Mite types as used on MIM Strats and some Affinities have two bar magnets, with the polepieces between them.
Most of the other cheapo pickups I encounter (Squier SE100) have a single bar magnet, with the polepieces' bottom ends touching the magnet.
So far, the best sounding ceramic Strat pickups I've encountered were the ones that came on a couple of Johnson Strat copies, the older ones with the plain arrow headstock (like a Costco "Starcaster").
When I first saw them, I did not have high hopes for them, as the plastic bobbins were really flimsy, and one of them was even dead when I got the guitar. But just to try them, I reinstalled them in the axe when I assembled it, and was blown away by how great they sound. Round, like a George Harrison "brrong" tone.
I took the dead one apart, and it looks like no other ceramic bar Strat pickup I'd seen.
As these photos show, the polepieces are shorter than I usually see, and the bar magnet actually sits inside the winding.
Here's the bottom with the cover removed:
Here's the top with one of the polepieces removed, and you can see that the polepiece is shorter than on the usual ceramic bar pickup:
Here's a side shot:
I'm posting here because I thought you folks might find this interesting.
I don't know much about pickup theory, but someone I was telling about it said that getting the magnet closer to the strings would surely have some effect, and having it inside the winding probably would, too.
The DC on them is pretty standard, in the neighborhood of 7.5K.
Anyone seen a cheapocaster pickup like this before? I'd love to buy a pile of them.
To learn more about guitar construction, I've been buying inexpensive Strats and copies thereof, taking them apart, modding them, reassembling, etc.
I'd not been a Strat player before getting into this construction/rescue Strat hobby a year or so ago.
One of the things I like about these cheapocasters is that they use a bar magnet and polepiece configuration, which seems to greatly reduce the dreaded string pull, or "stratitis."
The Cort/Mighty-Mite types as used on MIM Strats and some Affinities have two bar magnets, with the polepieces between them.
Most of the other cheapo pickups I encounter (Squier SE100) have a single bar magnet, with the polepieces' bottom ends touching the magnet.
So far, the best sounding ceramic Strat pickups I've encountered were the ones that came on a couple of Johnson Strat copies, the older ones with the plain arrow headstock (like a Costco "Starcaster").
When I first saw them, I did not have high hopes for them, as the plastic bobbins were really flimsy, and one of them was even dead when I got the guitar. But just to try them, I reinstalled them in the axe when I assembled it, and was blown away by how great they sound. Round, like a George Harrison "brrong" tone.
I took the dead one apart, and it looks like no other ceramic bar Strat pickup I'd seen.
As these photos show, the polepieces are shorter than I usually see, and the bar magnet actually sits inside the winding.
Here's the bottom with the cover removed:
Here's the top with one of the polepieces removed, and you can see that the polepiece is shorter than on the usual ceramic bar pickup:
Here's a side shot:
I'm posting here because I thought you folks might find this interesting.
I don't know much about pickup theory, but someone I was telling about it said that getting the magnet closer to the strings would surely have some effect, and having it inside the winding probably would, too.
The DC on them is pretty standard, in the neighborhood of 7.5K.
Anyone seen a cheapocaster pickup like this before? I'd love to buy a pile of them.
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