Originally posted by tubby.twins
View Post
And you cant have a wide aperture sidewinder, since they sense a single point on the string (unless they are Q-Tuners).
From the article Belwar posted in the other thread:
Lane classifies electromagnetic pickups into two groups, moving coil and moving magnet. Within the moving magnet variety there are four classes, single coil, humbuckers, stacked coil, and the bilateral twin coil. The bilateral has the advantage of hum cancelling, and still sounds like a single coil, the cleanest you can get.
Also from that article:
After winding, the resulting armature is insulated with tape, the output cable is soldered into place with a brass sleeved strain relief, and the armature is entirely shielded with lapped seam 0.001" brass foil. This assembly is kept in the oven at 110, this in order to encourage rubberized epoxy to completely surround the windings. The armatures are placed in a bath of the rubberized epoxy, and evacuated to 29.33" in a Bell Jar. They cycle it 5 times to insure no bubbles remain between the wires, insuring ultra-low microphonics.
The rubberized armatures are then compressed from the sides and top, placed in the oven again, and allowed to cure overnight. These rubberized armatures are then prepared for the dedicated molding process. With less that the thickness of a guitar pick from the side of the armaure to the mold, precision is an absolute must! They attach precision cast spacers that hold the armature away from the tops and sides of the molds. They evacuate the proper amount of mixed epoxy, pour it into the molds, and then evacuate the molds for three complete cycles, at five minutes each. Then, it's back into the oven again for overnight curing.
The rubberized armatures are then compressed from the sides and top, placed in the oven again, and allowed to cure overnight. These rubberized armatures are then prepared for the dedicated molding process. With less that the thickness of a guitar pick from the side of the armaure to the mold, precision is an absolute must! They attach precision cast spacers that hold the armature away from the tops and sides of the molds. They evacuate the proper amount of mixed epoxy, pour it into the molds, and then evacuate the molds for three complete cycles, at five minutes each. Then, it's back into the oven again for overnight curing.
Comment