I have long wanted a real electric guitar sounding pickup on a bronze strung guitar. 99% of what's on the market in mag pickups for bronze are voiced as "acoustic guitar pickups", that is they have relatively low output, wide band response, not too much peak, and are fairly low impedance devices. Fine. It's a decent approach for the best feedback suppression if that's what you need in an acoustic guitar pickup, but I am just fine with undersaddle pickups and high headroom active electronics for that in my semi-hollow Renaissance guitars. But...a real crossover guitar...one that can get nasty with a mag pickup...nice and fat, growling tone, good distortion driver...that's what I wanted.
Of course, the big problem with bronze strings and mag pickups is the miserable voicing between the (usually) wound G string and the unwound B. The B winds up hugely overpowering the G, and the high E is and icepick, too. The usual ways to deal with this are: adjustable pole pieces...with Sunrises you have to drop the Allen screws for the B and E practically all the way into the coil. Most other "acoustic" pickups have some other method of taming the magnetic strength, usually something internal that you can't see, but it could be distance, it could be magnetic shunting, whatever.
So, sure, I could design something, but then I noticed that Seymour Duncan had the "StagMag" pickup...a humbucker with almost normal looking bobbins, but with Strat-like magnets instead of slugs, screws, and an Alnico bar. So now I drill out the base plate large enough to just shove the B and high E magnets down. Could do it with the G as well. I can get perfect string to string voicing, a real electric guitar sound, and it's a four wire pickup so I can use a push-pull to get single coil. I add this to my already piezo equipped Renaissances, put on a second output jack (sure, it could be a stereo jack, but people like two mono cords more than they like stereo cord), and now we have an acoustic electric on one channel and a fine sounding electric on the other...but with bronze strings. Next I'll make a solid body with just a StagMag and bronze strings, string it up with plain G .011's, and it should be great.
Obviously you could do something like this with typical single coil pickups, too. Just glue a bit of a plastic rod to the end of two or three of the magnets so the magnets themselves drop way down. Of course you could use shorter magnets, too, and use plastic extenders...or wood...or brass...
The point is that we can design pickups that allow the use of bronze strings on electric guitars.
Of course, the big problem with bronze strings and mag pickups is the miserable voicing between the (usually) wound G string and the unwound B. The B winds up hugely overpowering the G, and the high E is and icepick, too. The usual ways to deal with this are: adjustable pole pieces...with Sunrises you have to drop the Allen screws for the B and E practically all the way into the coil. Most other "acoustic" pickups have some other method of taming the magnetic strength, usually something internal that you can't see, but it could be distance, it could be magnetic shunting, whatever.
So, sure, I could design something, but then I noticed that Seymour Duncan had the "StagMag" pickup...a humbucker with almost normal looking bobbins, but with Strat-like magnets instead of slugs, screws, and an Alnico bar. So now I drill out the base plate large enough to just shove the B and high E magnets down. Could do it with the G as well. I can get perfect string to string voicing, a real electric guitar sound, and it's a four wire pickup so I can use a push-pull to get single coil. I add this to my already piezo equipped Renaissances, put on a second output jack (sure, it could be a stereo jack, but people like two mono cords more than they like stereo cord), and now we have an acoustic electric on one channel and a fine sounding electric on the other...but with bronze strings. Next I'll make a solid body with just a StagMag and bronze strings, string it up with plain G .011's, and it should be great.
Obviously you could do something like this with typical single coil pickups, too. Just glue a bit of a plastic rod to the end of two or three of the magnets so the magnets themselves drop way down. Of course you could use shorter magnets, too, and use plastic extenders...or wood...or brass...
The point is that we can design pickups that allow the use of bronze strings on electric guitars.
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