As required in another thread, some photos of a repair of a vintage Swedish pickup; Kjell mikrofonen (mikrofonen meaning pickup in swedish...). This pickup was created by swedish Jazz and session player Kjell Sjölund in the early 50's. This is what it looks like:
The pickup is made to be attached to the neck, hovering above the top of the guitar. The problem was that the screws were rusted stuck and I had to be a bit too violent to them to get them out. New screws had to be made (unfortunately no pics of the finished pickup). The pickup itself was also totally dead and the circuit open.
Carefully prying it open (it as obviously been worked on before...) this is the inside:
It is at first glance something similar to a P90 in construction, but more on that later. Is also has an air coil wrapped in cloth for insulation. Now I got really nervous. Lets hope the problem isn't within the coil itself. That would be bad.
The magnet/keeper bar assembly came out pretty easily:
Peeling of one small extra piece of cloth insulation around the connection lead wire shows the joint between the lead and the coil:
I was fortunate enough to find a bad solder joint in there. The coil itself was OK:
When examining the magnets I noticed that they were not oriented like I first thought (like in a P90, same poles facing inwards). Probably because they would have been to thin to hold the strength if they were oriented like that. They were instead oriented with north/south pointing outwards towards the treble or bass side of the strings. That was a surprise to me. I had to play around a bit to orient them to get the most out of them as their magnetic fields were not exactly symmetric either. In the end I got the oriented in a way that still produced a lower-than-average-on-a-modern-pickup magnetic pull. The pole screws in the end measured from 150 Gauss at the E string poles to around 80 Gauss at the D and G strings (forgot to document this).
Hope this was interesting.
The pickup is made to be attached to the neck, hovering above the top of the guitar. The problem was that the screws were rusted stuck and I had to be a bit too violent to them to get them out. New screws had to be made (unfortunately no pics of the finished pickup). The pickup itself was also totally dead and the circuit open.
Carefully prying it open (it as obviously been worked on before...) this is the inside:
It is at first glance something similar to a P90 in construction, but more on that later. Is also has an air coil wrapped in cloth for insulation. Now I got really nervous. Lets hope the problem isn't within the coil itself. That would be bad.
The magnet/keeper bar assembly came out pretty easily:
Peeling of one small extra piece of cloth insulation around the connection lead wire shows the joint between the lead and the coil:
I was fortunate enough to find a bad solder joint in there. The coil itself was OK:
When examining the magnets I noticed that they were not oriented like I first thought (like in a P90, same poles facing inwards). Probably because they would have been to thin to hold the strength if they were oriented like that. They were instead oriented with north/south pointing outwards towards the treble or bass side of the strings. That was a surprise to me. I had to play around a bit to orient them to get the most out of them as their magnetic fields were not exactly symmetric either. In the end I got the oriented in a way that still produced a lower-than-average-on-a-modern-pickup magnetic pull. The pole screws in the end measured from 150 Gauss at the E string poles to around 80 Gauss at the D and G strings (forgot to document this).
Hope this was interesting.
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