Hello all, first post here, hoping someone can help me out as I'm going insane trying to wind pickups.
I'm trying to make single pole pickups, to pick up single strings for experimental instruments. I have made a bobbin out of a 5mm steel rod, rubber washer and a bit of acetate (as end stoppers).
My problem is that when I test continuity with a multimeter nothing happens - indicating the magnet wire is broken somewhere along the way. I am using 42 AWG solderable wire, and have practiced soldering shorter lengths to the lead wires, which works fine.
I solder the first lead wire, stick it to the outside of the bobbin, then by hand wrap about 10 wraps around the core, keeping to the side the lead wire is on. Then I spin the bobbin on a drill I've set up as my winder.
I've done about 7 goes now (I need to make approximately 30 of these, so have made lots of bobbins) and none pass signal. If the wire kinks, does it break under the weight/pressure of the subsequent winds? It doesn't seem to be snagging on anything, and though I've had a few snaps (at which stage I see if signal passes through whatever amount of winds that happen to be on the bobbin), I don't think the wire has broken, and I'm pretty sure my soldering technique is alright, as the shorter lengths I've practiced with all pass signal.
This is getting really irritating as there seems to be no way of checking if the coil is continuous until I've spent several minutes winding it thousands of times around a small piece of metal bar.
Any tips would be greatly appreciated...I'm new to pickup winding but need to figure this out as soon as possible as I have a project I need loads of pickups for next month.
Thanks
I'm trying to make single pole pickups, to pick up single strings for experimental instruments. I have made a bobbin out of a 5mm steel rod, rubber washer and a bit of acetate (as end stoppers).
My problem is that when I test continuity with a multimeter nothing happens - indicating the magnet wire is broken somewhere along the way. I am using 42 AWG solderable wire, and have practiced soldering shorter lengths to the lead wires, which works fine.
I solder the first lead wire, stick it to the outside of the bobbin, then by hand wrap about 10 wraps around the core, keeping to the side the lead wire is on. Then I spin the bobbin on a drill I've set up as my winder.
I've done about 7 goes now (I need to make approximately 30 of these, so have made lots of bobbins) and none pass signal. If the wire kinks, does it break under the weight/pressure of the subsequent winds? It doesn't seem to be snagging on anything, and though I've had a few snaps (at which stage I see if signal passes through whatever amount of winds that happen to be on the bobbin), I don't think the wire has broken, and I'm pretty sure my soldering technique is alright, as the shorter lengths I've practiced with all pass signal.
This is getting really irritating as there seems to be no way of checking if the coil is continuous until I've spent several minutes winding it thousands of times around a small piece of metal bar.
Any tips would be greatly appreciated...I'm new to pickup winding but need to figure this out as soon as possible as I have a project I need loads of pickups for next month.
Thanks
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