Originally posted by Wired
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In pickups this can dull the tone.
The laminated cores in transformers and pickups help by not having a very thick piece of metal. Thin pieces have less issues with eddy currents and another way around the problem is to break up the surface area.
Kinman's idea is to use a steel bottom bobbin to increase the inductance of the dummy coil, and the laminations help prevent eddy currents.
Some pickup makers use laminated steel blades in their pickups to help prevent treble loss.
The Lace pickups (I assume you mean the Alumitone) do have a transformer. They are single turn coils, and produce more current than voltage. The transformer steps the output up. In the Alumitones, the aluminum structure that forms the pickup is actually the coil. The two black squares are ceramic magnets. In the Transsensor pickup, they have a thick single loop of copper.
This is similar to ribbon microphones. A thin ribbon of metal is hung in front of a magnet, and has a wire attached to each end. When the sound vibrations move the ribbon, the magnet induces current to flow in the ribbon.
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