The problem is..
If you're playing blues and your phrasing has spots where you don't play, letting the listener 'breathe', there's that dang hum! Ever play a gig where the bar left the jukebox or TV on during your set? Nothing ruins 'All Your Love' by Magic Sam like the lilting strains of Foghat slowly riding over it For me, that's what hum is like,..might as well just set an a.m. radio on top of your amp tuned to Limbaugh.
The only hum cancelling method that seems to work well and isn't terribly complicated is the dummy coil in series, away from the pickup. That's my go-to cure-all. IMO when done nicely, It retains about 98 - 99% of the single coil mojo. You have to have REALLY good ears to hear the difference, where I would put the best of the commercial stack type pups at 90%. You've GOT to get that other coil away from the strings and magnetic field. The more 'art' than science part is that the dummy coil only works really well with narrow coils with moderate turns, i.e. regular garden variety strat style pups. The fatter the coil, and the more turns, the harder it is to get the hum cancelled. On P-90's I have to settle for a bit of residual hum. Pickups with weirdo designs like Gretsch Hi-Lo trons are also tricky.
BTW I actually like the sound of P-100's in certain applications. Send them to me! I will dispose of them properly
If you're playing blues and your phrasing has spots where you don't play, letting the listener 'breathe', there's that dang hum! Ever play a gig where the bar left the jukebox or TV on during your set? Nothing ruins 'All Your Love' by Magic Sam like the lilting strains of Foghat slowly riding over it For me, that's what hum is like,..might as well just set an a.m. radio on top of your amp tuned to Limbaugh.
The only hum cancelling method that seems to work well and isn't terribly complicated is the dummy coil in series, away from the pickup. That's my go-to cure-all. IMO when done nicely, It retains about 98 - 99% of the single coil mojo. You have to have REALLY good ears to hear the difference, where I would put the best of the commercial stack type pups at 90%. You've GOT to get that other coil away from the strings and magnetic field. The more 'art' than science part is that the dummy coil only works really well with narrow coils with moderate turns, i.e. regular garden variety strat style pups. The fatter the coil, and the more turns, the harder it is to get the hum cancelled. On P-90's I have to settle for a bit of residual hum. Pickups with weirdo designs like Gretsch Hi-Lo trons are also tricky.
BTW I actually like the sound of P-100's in certain applications. Send them to me! I will dispose of them properly
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