I recently bought my son a special issue of MAKE magazine that featured 3d printers. They really are getting cheap these days. Cripes, when you consider inflation, you can buy a decent 3d printer for less than I paid for my Star Micronics Gemini-10 dot matrix printer in 1982.
One of the things about 3d printers is that it allows one to professionally produce items on a one-off basis (or other very small quantities) that would traditionally have required big money contracts to produce a die and production-run for.
So naturally, one begins to wonder about the prospects such setups hold for making pickups. In theory, a person could make custom bobbins for themselves, or customers. Want a PAF-style bobbin that's juuuuussst a little taller? Make yourself a pair. Need a replacement plastic cover for a "staple" P90? Print one off. And just think of the possibilities for custom control knobs or your "dream P90 cover" (initials, insignias, paiseley, bare nekkid gals, etc.) or pickguards that can just be printed, rather than machined.
Now, I say all of this without any awareness of what the limitiations on "printable" materials are. It may be the plastics used for such things do not lend themselves well to guitars, but I imagine even if that's the case, things will change.
Start dreaming now, folks!
One of the things about 3d printers is that it allows one to professionally produce items on a one-off basis (or other very small quantities) that would traditionally have required big money contracts to produce a die and production-run for.
So naturally, one begins to wonder about the prospects such setups hold for making pickups. In theory, a person could make custom bobbins for themselves, or customers. Want a PAF-style bobbin that's juuuuussst a little taller? Make yourself a pair. Need a replacement plastic cover for a "staple" P90? Print one off. And just think of the possibilities for custom control knobs or your "dream P90 cover" (initials, insignias, paiseley, bare nekkid gals, etc.) or pickguards that can just be printed, rather than machined.
Now, I say all of this without any awareness of what the limitiations on "printable" materials are. It may be the plastics used for such things do not lend themselves well to guitars, but I imagine even if that's the case, things will change.
Start dreaming now, folks!
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