Folks -
OK... time to take a leap here.
At present I have a need to build some very lightweight yet very efficient passive high-impedance pickups for guitar applications. I have a clue or two about how to get a bunch of wire crammed into a place in a magnetic circuit that will react fairly well to the relatively small disturbance caused by a teeny little string. But now I need to get more serious about the basic business of transducing string behavior into electrical signals.
My thoughts go to some figure of merit that takes into account not only the density of the flux around the wire (and the direction of its motion relative to the wire's length) but also the "instability" of the field with respect to a small disturbance such as a little string might cause.
And so, a couple of questions come to mind:
1. Is there a way to determine a benchmark for efficiency in guitar pickup designs?
2. Am I nuts to think that there might be a way to form a relatively unstable field that is more easily modulated by the very small motions of the very small things we call strings?
I need for the Big Boys to weigh in on this one; you know who you are.
Bob Palmieri
OK... time to take a leap here.
At present I have a need to build some very lightweight yet very efficient passive high-impedance pickups for guitar applications. I have a clue or two about how to get a bunch of wire crammed into a place in a magnetic circuit that will react fairly well to the relatively small disturbance caused by a teeny little string. But now I need to get more serious about the basic business of transducing string behavior into electrical signals.
My thoughts go to some figure of merit that takes into account not only the density of the flux around the wire (and the direction of its motion relative to the wire's length) but also the "instability" of the field with respect to a small disturbance such as a little string might cause.
And so, a couple of questions come to mind:
1. Is there a way to determine a benchmark for efficiency in guitar pickup designs?
2. Am I nuts to think that there might be a way to form a relatively unstable field that is more easily modulated by the very small motions of the very small things we call strings?
I need for the Big Boys to weigh in on this one; you know who you are.
Bob Palmieri
Comment