I have had this pickup since about 1978 when my friend gave/traded it to me. He said it was from a Johnny Smith guitar. He unfortunately had mounted it on a mandolin and bent the legs and they broke when trying to straighten them back. There are no obvious ID marks on it. How would I verify that it is really from a Johnny Smith?
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Johnny Smith pickup identification
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open the Johnny Smith pickup
To crack the cover it would appear I would have to remove the 2 large globs of solder joining the backplate and the gold cover. What is the danger of melting something inside? Are there typically no identifying stamp/marks on the back? thanks
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You can also slice or saw through the solder with X-acto knife/saw or with the dremel tool. Just look out for the exposed coils underneath. To de-solder best to have a de-soldering pump or squeeze bulb or wick handy and get a 100W model so you don't linger too long in one spot and melt the bobbins.
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And nobody noticed the error in my first post... There should of cause not be two coil with a magnet in each, but one coil with a magnet inside, screw in the other coil (anchored into the baseplate and a ferrous shim that magnetically connects the screw to the magnet. Must have been thingking about the firebird pickups
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inside the Johnny Smith pickup
Here is what is inside. I have solder sucker and a very good soldering station so getting in was easy.
Does this look like an original "Johnny Smith" pickup? I soldered a cable on it and placed it on my ES 175 and it sounded good.
Thanks for the input so far.
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Boy, that's a weird little pickup.It would be possible to describe everything scientifically, but it would make no sense; it would be without meaning, as if you described a Beethoven symphony as a variation of wave pressure. — Albert Einstein
http://coneyislandguitars.com
www.soundcloud.com/davidravenmoon
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