I've experimented quite a bit with pulling the poles, magnets, and keepers out of humbuckers for different sounds. You can certainly move towards a P-90 or single coil sound but the geometry of the coils locks you into a certain range. That second coil, though lacking its own set of poles, is still inside the flux of the other coil's field and does produce some signal.
It IS possible to get more of a P-90 sound out of that type of setup, but you have to wind your coils initially with that goal in mind. The Dimarzio Bluesbucker is essentially, a humbucker with just one coil magnetized but there are some subtleties to its construction. It isn't just a standard model with just one coil magnetized.
I've found that for the most part you will retain most of your hum rejection if you pull the poles or screws from a coil- enough that it isn't usually a problem. Designs that are engineered from the ground up can compensate.
Yanking screws out of humbuckers is one of the cheapest ways to get a "new" pickup or sound and it is reversible, so try and see what sticks!
It IS possible to get more of a P-90 sound out of that type of setup, but you have to wind your coils initially with that goal in mind. The Dimarzio Bluesbucker is essentially, a humbucker with just one coil magnetized but there are some subtleties to its construction. It isn't just a standard model with just one coil magnetized.
I've found that for the most part you will retain most of your hum rejection if you pull the poles or screws from a coil- enough that it isn't usually a problem. Designs that are engineered from the ground up can compensate.
Yanking screws out of humbuckers is one of the cheapest ways to get a "new" pickup or sound and it is reversible, so try and see what sticks!
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