Esquire or Telecaster hidden pickup
I've been thinking to build pickups using Neodymium, the strongest type of permanent magnet, but after reading a lot about the Neo magnets on different musical Forums, I came to the conclusion that a too strong magnet is killing the vibration of the strings that want to stick to the magnets reducing the sustain of the instrument. So I left the idea in the drawer for a while. Then a light came on, what about a hidden pickup under the pickguard of a Esquire or a third pickup on a Telecaster that would be further away from the strings ? Lets try the idea.
So I ordered some .125 inch (1/8") Diameter rod by .625 inch (5/8") long Neodymium magnets. In a attempt to obtain a fatter tone than the standard Tele pickups, I builded the bobbin 0.375 inch (3/8") tall just in between of a typical Strat pickup at about 0.500 inch (1/2") tall and a P-90 at 0.250 inch (1/4") tall, hoping to fattening the tone a bit.
I made the bobbin using curly maple a bit wider (less hight = more wight for the same number of turns) and again, to be in between a Fender single coil and a Gibson P-90, I tryed 9250 turns. String spacing 2 inchs for a middle Tele pickup.
Here it is with 9267 turns of 42 gauge magnet wire giving a resistance 6.91K Ohms.
Enjoy.
I've been thinking to build pickups using Neodymium, the strongest type of permanent magnet, but after reading a lot about the Neo magnets on different musical Forums, I came to the conclusion that a too strong magnet is killing the vibration of the strings that want to stick to the magnets reducing the sustain of the instrument. So I left the idea in the drawer for a while. Then a light came on, what about a hidden pickup under the pickguard of a Esquire or a third pickup on a Telecaster that would be further away from the strings ? Lets try the idea.
So I ordered some .125 inch (1/8") Diameter rod by .625 inch (5/8") long Neodymium magnets. In a attempt to obtain a fatter tone than the standard Tele pickups, I builded the bobbin 0.375 inch (3/8") tall just in between of a typical Strat pickup at about 0.500 inch (1/2") tall and a P-90 at 0.250 inch (1/4") tall, hoping to fattening the tone a bit.
I made the bobbin using curly maple a bit wider (less hight = more wight for the same number of turns) and again, to be in between a Fender single coil and a Gibson P-90, I tryed 9250 turns. String spacing 2 inchs for a middle Tele pickup.
Here it is with 9267 turns of 42 gauge magnet wire giving a resistance 6.91K Ohms.
Enjoy.
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