Originally posted by Dave Kerr
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Advice on rewinding cheap pickups...
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Originally posted by Dave Kerr View PostSteve Kersting's S90 is a nice sounding pickup on-the-cheap.
Do you think the ceramic magnets that are on them already are good enough?
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My first bucker sounded great and was handwound on StewMac kit stuff. The thing about machine winding is you can repeat a traverse pass pretty much perfectly every time which no human hand can do. Depending on what the turns per layer is you can get more articulation than a hand wind can IMHO. My first machine wound pickup was a P90. I love P90's so thats why I wound it first. I was never able to get a P90 to sound like a real vintage one, they were always darker no matter how I wound it with hand guiding. the first machine wound P90 nailed it to a T.
there are great handwound pickups out there, Holmes, Rolph etc. too.
Brass baseplates aren't necesserily a "bad" thing. DiMarzio uses them for a reason, not because they are cheap, or he IS cheap but designs his pickups to work with brass. Mojo's first bucker baseplates were more brassy than they are now and I really liked how they sounded and you could see in the LCR meter that the mids were being bumped up, but anyone paying $500 for a PAF repro doesn't want to see yellow baseplates, so I couldn't use them.http://www.SDpickups.com
Stephens Design Pickups
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Originally posted by Possum View Post...but anyone paying $500 for a PAF repro doesn't want to see yellow baseplates, so I couldn't use them.
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Oh yeah it did. As I said it had a mid-boost that was really nice. But I have since found out how to do this in other ways. This was a bridge pickup and wouldn't have been good on a neck pickup. Wasn't solid brass, just a very yellowish nickel silver...
I tried all kinds of crazy things to get the same effect, like putting a brass plate under the bobbins and magnet on top of the baseplate, didn't really work very well though...http://www.SDpickups.com
Stephens Design Pickups
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I once had this idea to rewind a bunch of cheap humbuckers I had planned to buy on ebay. The price for the pickups was way cheaper than I could have sourced parts at. I bought one as a test and was horrified at the quality of materials. So, I bought parts from Montreux instead.Chris Monck
eguitarplans.com
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Let's just say
that we stay on topic....
Yes, wind anything you want to. You will learn a ton. Will the results be perfect? no, but getting your hands on some wire will help you understand. If all else fails, replace all the metal parts, use the bobbins and proceed.
When I started doing this, I bought an epiphone les paul, and yanked the pickups immediately. I put in my own winds. They sounded better, brighter, more articulate. Just try it.
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