So, I've got this no-name, junk-store lap steel that I want to fix up just to play "Sleepwalk."
The pickup is marked "EYE-BEAM Electromuse STRING PICKUP CHICAGO USA".
Here's what I've found out about Electromuse via the interweb:
1. What Wikipedia says. Electromuse - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2. A bazillion Electromuse "canoe paddle" student lap steels were built in the '40s and '50s.
Here's one. http://www.krazykatmusic.com/wp-cont...ap-Steel-1.jpg
3. My instrument appears to be some "store-brand stencil." It has the same control plate and 12 ft pigtail as the "canoe paddles", but the same body shape and red, white, and blue fretboard as this "Bronson". Zorko's Guitars
4. The pickups are low output. On one Steel Guitar forum, an old timer reminisces about the canoe paddles coming with "pure iron strings" to increase output, and having to oil the strings to keep the rust down enough to avoid tetanus....
Here's what I've found out by examination and disassembly of my instrument:
1. The wiring is standard-issue "one pickup with volume and tone"- except the volume pot is only 20Kohm. The tone circuit is 150K pot with .05uF cap.
2. The Eye-Beam pickup is slightly weird- basically a blade pickup turned sideways. The core is a piece of steel I-channel (AKA H-channel), magnetized across the bar so one flange is North and the other flange is South; the two "toaster slots" in the cover align with the flanges.
3. The core is badly rusted and pitted. The cloth tape wrapped around the core split along a flange, and a bunch of inner coil turns severed.
4. I'm not sure of the coil wire guage, but there wasn't a whole lot of wire in the coil.
Here's how I contemplate rebuilding the pickup:
1. Either clean up the original core or find a bright, shiny, new piece of I-channel. Also, file the ends smooth and round.
2. Wrap the core with cloth tape, then soak the tape in nail polish.
3. Wind as much 42AWG as physically possible onto the core.
4. Magnetize the core with a pair of the strongest Neos I can get my hands on.
5. And so on.
Here are some questions:
1. Where can one find new steel H-channel, 1" wide with ~3/8" flanges?
2. In theory, does the Eye-Beam pickup work? Or is it like the hummingbird that can hover because it doesn't know physics?
3. In practice, do these pickups have any redeeming values? Might I be able to get "reasonable" level from a rebuilt pickup? Would I be better off replacing the Eye-Beam with something else? If so, what would be a good example of "something else"?
Thanks,
-rb
The pickup is marked "EYE-BEAM Electromuse STRING PICKUP CHICAGO USA".
Here's what I've found out about Electromuse via the interweb:
1. What Wikipedia says. Electromuse - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2. A bazillion Electromuse "canoe paddle" student lap steels were built in the '40s and '50s.
Here's one. http://www.krazykatmusic.com/wp-cont...ap-Steel-1.jpg
3. My instrument appears to be some "store-brand stencil." It has the same control plate and 12 ft pigtail as the "canoe paddles", but the same body shape and red, white, and blue fretboard as this "Bronson". Zorko's Guitars
4. The pickups are low output. On one Steel Guitar forum, an old timer reminisces about the canoe paddles coming with "pure iron strings" to increase output, and having to oil the strings to keep the rust down enough to avoid tetanus....
Here's what I've found out by examination and disassembly of my instrument:
1. The wiring is standard-issue "one pickup with volume and tone"- except the volume pot is only 20Kohm. The tone circuit is 150K pot with .05uF cap.
2. The Eye-Beam pickup is slightly weird- basically a blade pickup turned sideways. The core is a piece of steel I-channel (AKA H-channel), magnetized across the bar so one flange is North and the other flange is South; the two "toaster slots" in the cover align with the flanges.
3. The core is badly rusted and pitted. The cloth tape wrapped around the core split along a flange, and a bunch of inner coil turns severed.
4. I'm not sure of the coil wire guage, but there wasn't a whole lot of wire in the coil.
Here's how I contemplate rebuilding the pickup:
1. Either clean up the original core or find a bright, shiny, new piece of I-channel. Also, file the ends smooth and round.
2. Wrap the core with cloth tape, then soak the tape in nail polish.
3. Wind as much 42AWG as physically possible onto the core.
4. Magnetize the core with a pair of the strongest Neos I can get my hands on.
5. And so on.
Here are some questions:
1. Where can one find new steel H-channel, 1" wide with ~3/8" flanges?
2. In theory, does the Eye-Beam pickup work? Or is it like the hummingbird that can hover because it doesn't know physics?
3. In practice, do these pickups have any redeeming values? Might I be able to get "reasonable" level from a rebuilt pickup? Would I be better off replacing the Eye-Beam with something else? If so, what would be a good example of "something else"?
Thanks,
-rb
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