I wanted to post this general info I got from lab examination of 14 examples of mostly vintage wire and several examples of modern wire, some not available anymore.
Vintage wire differs from modern in ohms per foot. For example some later period PAF wire was 1.876 ohms per foot. A nearly identical modern wire, the new black wire from Elektrisola measures 1.702 ohms per foot.
Tensile strength in modern wire is higher than vintage wire because the copper is more pure, and the wire is better annealed than the old stuff. The old stuff broke more easily than modern.
Insulation is very different. I read from Tim Shaw that he found the insulation of old wire was thicker than modern. This isn't what we found at all, just goes to show you, don't believe anything you read from old work done years ago, probably before laser measurements were available.
Example, from a 1960 PAF one of the best year examples for tone, bare wire was .061mm, while O.D. was .066mm, an insulation of .005mm thick. Here's where some of you are going to choke, a spool of American Wire Corp. black wire from about 2004 or so, bare wire diameter .062mm, with O.D. .072mm, and insulation of .010mm thick.
I always thought the AWC wire was a vintage correct wire but it turns out its a nearly heavy build modern PE. I have some that has even thicker insulation than the conservative sample I sent. Its good wire but isn't like anything in any of the vintage examples I sent out except for an oddball sample from a 1965 Cort bass that had an astonishing .011mm thick insulation and a bare wire of .059mm.
Most of the vintage PE averaged about .005mm thick insulation. Modern REA wire was .008-.010mm thick insulation.
Modern heavy formvar 42 bare min. is .061mm with O.D. of .076mm so an insulation of .015mm so the AWC sample isn't quite heavy build, but gets fairly close, I'm sure some of the other samples I have are heavy build over slightly over, I sent them the most normal AWC stuff I had to see how it compared to vintage.
Other things they check were concentricity (roundness) and they said they were amazed how round the old stuff actually was.
Ohms per foot on all the modern stuff was lower than vintage, because of the more pure copper and because of the high quality anneal process.
The vintage PE samples were from '51, '58', '60,'56, '62. '65.
I was told they can do the old wire but not a minimum order, so you'd be looking at probably 1000lbs if you wanted to match the stuff that was made back then. The closest modern wire to vintage was some Essex stuff I had left over from about 2003 but it wasn't a match either.
They told me the insulation for PE is the same as back then, but weren't 100% sure as the coatings are made by a different company, so dieletric effects could be an issue and probably the modern PE versions are better insulators than the old stuff, I bet. Also that the company that makes it dislikes making the stuff and don't like doing small batches..
So, vintage wire was noticably darker sounding than modern wire, I pretty much knew that already from making copies of my Patent pickup coils and putting PAF parts into both, the modern coils are really much brighter sounding. The theories about "micro cracks" in the insulation because of aging making the coils sound darker partly falls apart with this data in hand, coils do get darker over time and i've heard this in my own PAF work from only 3 years ago. Why, is anyone's guess.......
Vintage wire differs from modern in ohms per foot. For example some later period PAF wire was 1.876 ohms per foot. A nearly identical modern wire, the new black wire from Elektrisola measures 1.702 ohms per foot.
Tensile strength in modern wire is higher than vintage wire because the copper is more pure, and the wire is better annealed than the old stuff. The old stuff broke more easily than modern.
Insulation is very different. I read from Tim Shaw that he found the insulation of old wire was thicker than modern. This isn't what we found at all, just goes to show you, don't believe anything you read from old work done years ago, probably before laser measurements were available.
Example, from a 1960 PAF one of the best year examples for tone, bare wire was .061mm, while O.D. was .066mm, an insulation of .005mm thick. Here's where some of you are going to choke, a spool of American Wire Corp. black wire from about 2004 or so, bare wire diameter .062mm, with O.D. .072mm, and insulation of .010mm thick.
I always thought the AWC wire was a vintage correct wire but it turns out its a nearly heavy build modern PE. I have some that has even thicker insulation than the conservative sample I sent. Its good wire but isn't like anything in any of the vintage examples I sent out except for an oddball sample from a 1965 Cort bass that had an astonishing .011mm thick insulation and a bare wire of .059mm.
Most of the vintage PE averaged about .005mm thick insulation. Modern REA wire was .008-.010mm thick insulation.
Modern heavy formvar 42 bare min. is .061mm with O.D. of .076mm so an insulation of .015mm so the AWC sample isn't quite heavy build, but gets fairly close, I'm sure some of the other samples I have are heavy build over slightly over, I sent them the most normal AWC stuff I had to see how it compared to vintage.
Other things they check were concentricity (roundness) and they said they were amazed how round the old stuff actually was.
Ohms per foot on all the modern stuff was lower than vintage, because of the more pure copper and because of the high quality anneal process.
The vintage PE samples were from '51, '58', '60,'56, '62. '65.
I was told they can do the old wire but not a minimum order, so you'd be looking at probably 1000lbs if you wanted to match the stuff that was made back then. The closest modern wire to vintage was some Essex stuff I had left over from about 2003 but it wasn't a match either.
They told me the insulation for PE is the same as back then, but weren't 100% sure as the coatings are made by a different company, so dieletric effects could be an issue and probably the modern PE versions are better insulators than the old stuff, I bet. Also that the company that makes it dislikes making the stuff and don't like doing small batches..
So, vintage wire was noticably darker sounding than modern wire, I pretty much knew that already from making copies of my Patent pickup coils and putting PAF parts into both, the modern coils are really much brighter sounding. The theories about "micro cracks" in the insulation because of aging making the coils sound darker partly falls apart with this data in hand, coils do get darker over time and i've heard this in my own PAF work from only 3 years ago. Why, is anyone's guess.......
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