Here's my proposed project. If you guys tell me it's hopeless or needs major revisions, I'll listen and learn.
The idea here is to make a split coil pickup to put in the neck position of a 4-string bass build I have started, roughly where a P-bass pickup would be.
I'd like it to sound similar to a 'modern' P-bass pickup, meaning a big fat fundamental and bright enough so you hear some attack. Instead of "moom-moom-moom" (thiink P-bass with the tone turned down) I want to hear "doom-doom-doom," meaning bright enough to bring out the attack. I always play with fingers (so far).
I am definitely going to use a preamp, so I am not too concerned about hot output or internal capacitance, since I'm taking the guitar cord out of the equation.
Here's the plan view I came up with after studying this site a lot. This is a see-through drawing:
It's 2 coils, epoxy potted in an MM shaped case. The case has a solid top and the coil is 1/16" below the surface. Maybe plastic case for the trial version, then a macassar ebony case for the production pickup if I love the results. The neck pickup will be a real MM clone pickup, not home made. By choosing these case dimensions, if I hate the sound I can just buy another MM clone for the neck.
Here's how the coils are constructed:
I'm using 4 layers of low carbon steel for the core, out of concern about loss of highs from eddy currents (forbidden topic?). I chose 4 layers with a total width of about 1/4" so that there's a reasonable amount of surface area to stick the neo magnet onto at the bottom. The blades/layers would be dipped in lacquer or something before assembly. And the whole bobbin lightly epoxy coated before I start to wind.
Here are the things I hope you guys can advise me on:
1) This is a pretty high mass core compared to a single blade. Is that a problem?
2) If I underwind this in comparison to a typical P-bass pickup will I sacrifice the beefy bottom end? I am thinking of trying 4000 turns of 42ga single poly insulated wire, not heavily scattered. I don't want to build up 10,000 turns on that thick core and make coils too fat to fit into the case as shown above.
3) The neo magnets I have seen on the 'bay come in 40mm X 10mm x 5mm or 40 x 10 x 2. Since I don't need high output, is the 2 mm thick one sufficient?
4) In the diagram I said 1018 steel, but I might end up using HR1 or CR1 commercial steel, which have a maximum of .12% to .15% carbon, so maybe a bit more permeable than 1018.
One final note--I have read here that if the resonant peak is very high (let's say over 6khz) the pickup may sound darker, because it's too high for the bass rig to reproduce. That would certainly be the case with my G-K MB115 (no mid, no tweeter). So I might end up adding a cap across the pickup to lower that point until I like it.
Thanks in advance for any design suggestions you make.
John
The idea here is to make a split coil pickup to put in the neck position of a 4-string bass build I have started, roughly where a P-bass pickup would be.
I'd like it to sound similar to a 'modern' P-bass pickup, meaning a big fat fundamental and bright enough so you hear some attack. Instead of "moom-moom-moom" (thiink P-bass with the tone turned down) I want to hear "doom-doom-doom," meaning bright enough to bring out the attack. I always play with fingers (so far).
I am definitely going to use a preamp, so I am not too concerned about hot output or internal capacitance, since I'm taking the guitar cord out of the equation.
Here's the plan view I came up with after studying this site a lot. This is a see-through drawing:
It's 2 coils, epoxy potted in an MM shaped case. The case has a solid top and the coil is 1/16" below the surface. Maybe plastic case for the trial version, then a macassar ebony case for the production pickup if I love the results. The neck pickup will be a real MM clone pickup, not home made. By choosing these case dimensions, if I hate the sound I can just buy another MM clone for the neck.
Here's how the coils are constructed:
I'm using 4 layers of low carbon steel for the core, out of concern about loss of highs from eddy currents (forbidden topic?). I chose 4 layers with a total width of about 1/4" so that there's a reasonable amount of surface area to stick the neo magnet onto at the bottom. The blades/layers would be dipped in lacquer or something before assembly. And the whole bobbin lightly epoxy coated before I start to wind.
Here are the things I hope you guys can advise me on:
1) This is a pretty high mass core compared to a single blade. Is that a problem?
2) If I underwind this in comparison to a typical P-bass pickup will I sacrifice the beefy bottom end? I am thinking of trying 4000 turns of 42ga single poly insulated wire, not heavily scattered. I don't want to build up 10,000 turns on that thick core and make coils too fat to fit into the case as shown above.
3) The neo magnets I have seen on the 'bay come in 40mm X 10mm x 5mm or 40 x 10 x 2. Since I don't need high output, is the 2 mm thick one sufficient?
4) In the diagram I said 1018 steel, but I might end up using HR1 or CR1 commercial steel, which have a maximum of .12% to .15% carbon, so maybe a bit more permeable than 1018.
One final note--I have read here that if the resonant peak is very high (let's say over 6khz) the pickup may sound darker, because it's too high for the bass rig to reproduce. That would certainly be the case with my G-K MB115 (no mid, no tweeter). So I might end up adding a cap across the pickup to lower that point until I like it.
Thanks in advance for any design suggestions you make.
John
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