So, with the long weekend and all, thought I'd finally take a stab at winding a low-impedance pickup for my bass. I made a coilform out of some plastic I had and used some hex screws for slugs (7 in all, for 4 strings), with some over-sized ceramic magnets underneath. I used #36 wire, and stuffed as much as I could get on the coilform, ending up with what I think was somewhere between 1500 and 2000 turns, and a DCR of around 550 ohms. Haven't installed it yet, but my usual "test" of tapping the blade of my utility knife on the polepieces gets me a signal of around 20-50mv; something that would yield a clean output that would not overdrive an amp (and maybe even tolerate a little preamping along the way).
What perplexes me, though, is the VERY spongy quality of the physical coil. I'm used to getting a little sponginess around the middle of the "long stretch", when winding guitar pickups with #41-43, which I can usually tame with a little wax potting to help pack it in. But this does not respond well to embedding wax in it. It flares out at the middle enough that the risk of microphonics seem high to me.
So, you'll pardon the pun but I'm trying to wrap my head around the physics of it, and figure out what I could do to make a tighter coil when using wire this thick. For example, is the shape of the ends of coilform critical? Do they need to be wider or rounder or something to allow for appropriate tension to be achieved?
I doing it slowly the recipe?
Was my mistake attempting to make a single coil for all 4 strings instead of a split 2+2 thing?
Should I just pour on the wax and let that solve things?
How do people achieve nice tight coils with wire this thick?
What perplexes me, though, is the VERY spongy quality of the physical coil. I'm used to getting a little sponginess around the middle of the "long stretch", when winding guitar pickups with #41-43, which I can usually tame with a little wax potting to help pack it in. But this does not respond well to embedding wax in it. It flares out at the middle enough that the risk of microphonics seem high to me.
So, you'll pardon the pun but I'm trying to wrap my head around the physics of it, and figure out what I could do to make a tighter coil when using wire this thick. For example, is the shape of the ends of coilform critical? Do they need to be wider or rounder or something to allow for appropriate tension to be achieved?
I doing it slowly the recipe?
Was my mistake attempting to make a single coil for all 4 strings instead of a split 2+2 thing?
Should I just pour on the wax and let that solve things?
How do people achieve nice tight coils with wire this thick?
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