Hi everyone-
I've just been making my first handful of PAF and early P90 sets, trying to get beyond some of the problems of the standard "off the shelf" parts available these days. I've been using mostly stuff from Mojotone, but I find that things like the 1.94" PAF/P90 steel spacer to be problematic. The spacer seems too lightweight and a bit too thin dimensionally (vertical height). This creates mechanical oscillations that I have to dampen out with tape shims or wax potting.
I have read through a good many posts here, going back to around 2006 or so, when the now senior members were struggling with these same issues. I'm just wondering if anybody is presently making better quality metal spacers and base plates for the 1.94" spacing and if I can purchase a handful for my own uses. I'm a hobbyist, I don't make many of these, just a few for myself and friends, but I would really like to get it right! (I'm old enough to have owned a few guit's with these pickups, and remember their unique sound and feel... old enough to wish I never sold any of them!).
Thanks in advance,
Allen
I've just been making my first handful of PAF and early P90 sets, trying to get beyond some of the problems of the standard "off the shelf" parts available these days. I've been using mostly stuff from Mojotone, but I find that things like the 1.94" PAF/P90 steel spacer to be problematic. The spacer seems too lightweight and a bit too thin dimensionally (vertical height). This creates mechanical oscillations that I have to dampen out with tape shims or wax potting.
I have read through a good many posts here, going back to around 2006 or so, when the now senior members were struggling with these same issues. I'm just wondering if anybody is presently making better quality metal spacers and base plates for the 1.94" spacing and if I can purchase a handful for my own uses. I'm a hobbyist, I don't make many of these, just a few for myself and friends, but I would really like to get it right! (I'm old enough to have owned a few guit's with these pickups, and remember their unique sound and feel... old enough to wish I never sold any of them!).
Thanks in advance,
Allen
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