But Duncan doesn't have to document anything for the public. Neither does DiMarzio or Bill Lawrence. That's proprietary R&D.
Bill Lawrence aka Willy Stich, sure he doesn't tell you why and how he engineered his samarium-cobalt pu's for fender, but he certainly did DEBUNK a whole lot of nonsense like "handwinding" , and a few tips for beginners like "DC resistance means sh*t all, we're talking impedance and frequency response " etc etc.
A short FAQ that isn't seen on SD's site, oddly.
That has nothing to do with pickup making. Have you designed and made any original pickups yourself? If you have, show the goods. If not, you don't have a foot to stand on. You can cite all the websites you want, but none of them had anything to do with pickup making.
This means that cryogenic treatment will incrementally change the sound of a guitar pickup if it has alnico and/or a soft magnetic alloy such as steel or 440 stainless.
Whether or not the change is desirable or practical ($$$) is up to the builder.
Search on "cryogenic treatment, magnetic permeability" to confirm that this has been studied and confirmed in the laboratory.
Whether or not the change is desirable or practical ($$$) is up to the builder.
Search on "cryogenic treatment, magnetic permeability" to confirm that this has been studied and confirmed in the laboratory.
440C steel is not a standard as a soft magnetic. If it's magnetic properties are altered through cryogenics anealing, there are hundreds of other steels already available that would correspond as a perfect equivalent in pickup use. Why? Because you can already bar from the list unimportant properties such as magnetostriction, heat dissipation, etc, which gives a list with much more equivalencies.
What I was "fighting" was the thought that cryo would instill some kind of unknown property (apart from crystal lattice mods) in PU slugs, akin to what some sites faked to explain concerining cryo treated hifi parts. But here you're merely telling me that a martensitic alloy has it's permeability augmented . Hooray. A true novelty.
I call poor engineering taking a common stainless and passing through an expensive treatment when you could choose an alloy taylored for transformator use, with the exact amount of whatever magnetic value you'r looking for. Mumetal is a misnomer, there are many variations of mumetal, different purities and grades of nickel and so on.
Salvarsan, all this steel business is in fact unimportant, since I've repeated MANY times on this same forum that cryo treatment is a reality in the steel industry (especially for grain refining.. bis repetita placent) . Ferromagneti materials ALWAYS see their magnetic properties modified along with ccrystaline/phase modifications. It's firts year level once again.
Even uneducated swordsmiths perform magnet-sticking tests to test phase changes
while heating the steel (instead of relying on visual heating color).
The problem with cryo treatment is not the steel or the nickel, but the so called effects on cryo treated silver. And THAT and only that is what I pointed ou in my posts.
Of course, I'm still waiting for you or your friends to point out to me a paper showing these supposed radical conduction and still unexplained modified properties in cryo treated silver (and please donot give me links pertaining to superconductors, they're not cryo treated, everything remains at cryo temp) .
Ive seen non up to now.
Unfortunately I have to justify myself with long speeches because some people call me close minded or deform my point of view.
But of course you start with something you like. Then you let people try it, and get feedback. Then you make changes. That's how I work. But I start with something I like and would use. How else are you going to do it?
But pickup making is about taste, so theory can lie back if the result is good. Sure, but lying to the customer and telling him that the sound could be achieved only by putting the product through expensive finishing processes and exotic materials is misleading.
From our conversations here I can say that Mike doesn't feel that oddly shaped pole pieces matter, or that the flux is coming from the pole peices, and instead they merely magnetize the strings.
anyways, this FEMM program Mike cited seems an interesting soft to "have an idea", I'm not going to model entire pickups, these softs are usually intended for the transfo industry aka designs with little or no human appreciation involved. I have a few ideas to check by simulation . Why? to link different flux paths and shapes to different sounds obtained on the same design (apart from that detail) by changing the shape with the the polepiece (s) . I must verify if it is truly a negligible mod or worth investigating further (I always left that detail out of the equation and it's time to see if I'm wrong or not, especially with the weird shapes/array of polepieces I have in mind)
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