I bought a blue MIK Epiphone Casino in the mid-90's. I haven't played it for years so I thought I would take it for a spin. It came with two P-90's in metal covers which I upgraded with Gibsons which I mounted with the metal covers. I wanted the middle position to be humcancelling so I flipped the magnets and reversed the coil wires on one of them. I have a power strip with FX transformers mounted on the leg of my amp bench so if I am too close it will cause some guitars to hum (a bit or a lot.)
Surprise, surprise! There was hardly any hum at all from the neck pickup, but plenty of hum from bridge pickup and the middle position. The only difference between the two pickups and their wiring was the flipped magnets and the reversed coil wires on one of them (I don't remember which after all of these years.) I'm thinking that the low-hum pickup has the ground lead connected to the outside of the coil and might be acting as shielding to some extent. One other observation: 4 of the 6 pole pieces of the "hummy" pickup are grounded, only one of them is ground with the low-hum pickup. (I may have wrapped teflon tape around the pole pieces- I dunno.)
The guitar is long overdue for a restringing so I will be able to investigate a little more but not right now. Any ideas? BTW I know I was careful in flipping the magnets- I would mark them with a Sharpie to make sure that I flipped them in the right direction- but I still might have screwed up.
Thanks!
Steve Ahola
P.S. This Epi Casino is the notorious "Blue Guitar." The big "E" on the pickguard reminded me of Otis Rush's 1st album: "Mourning in the Morning." I'll have to take a picture since the blue is very distinctive- kinda like the metallic blue in this picture:
Surprise, surprise! There was hardly any hum at all from the neck pickup, but plenty of hum from bridge pickup and the middle position. The only difference between the two pickups and their wiring was the flipped magnets and the reversed coil wires on one of them (I don't remember which after all of these years.) I'm thinking that the low-hum pickup has the ground lead connected to the outside of the coil and might be acting as shielding to some extent. One other observation: 4 of the 6 pole pieces of the "hummy" pickup are grounded, only one of them is ground with the low-hum pickup. (I may have wrapped teflon tape around the pole pieces- I dunno.)
The guitar is long overdue for a restringing so I will be able to investigate a little more but not right now. Any ideas? BTW I know I was careful in flipping the magnets- I would mark them with a Sharpie to make sure that I flipped them in the right direction- but I still might have screwed up.
Thanks!
Steve Ahola
P.S. This Epi Casino is the notorious "Blue Guitar." The big "E" on the pickguard reminded me of Otis Rush's 1st album: "Mourning in the Morning." I'll have to take a picture since the blue is very distinctive- kinda like the metallic blue in this picture:
Comment