This is a series I've made a couple of months ago, so I thought that could be something to have into archives, so there you go!
Epi Probuckers: a closer look
This is the Alnico Classic Pro neck, 7.76K@68°F. This design has a coil offset of about 100 Ohms, being the slug coil the strongest.
I'd say this p'up is based on the '57 Classic design. To my surprise, polepiece spread is 49.2mm.
The baseplate is nickelsilver-made. The slugs are chrome-plated and have the bull's eye. The screws are chrome-plated as well, looking vintage-y, if you ask me.
As you can see, wax-potting is not over-the-top like with the older models.
This one is Zebra. ABS bobbins, 4-conductor, as the Epi ES-339 Pro, where these came from, had coil-cutting. The cover looks nice, and is nickelsilver made, nickel-plated.
This is the Alnico Classic Pro bridge, 8.48K@68°F. Both coils measure exactly the same. Zero coil-offset.
I'd say this p'up is loosely-based on the '57 Classic Plus design, just a bit wimpier.
***EDIT: polepiece spread is 52mm. *** The baseplate is golden nickelsilver-made; the kind of alloy used in fretwire-making.
The slugs are chrome-plated and have the bull's eye. The screws are chrome-plated as well, looking vintage-y, if you ask me.
As you can see, wax-potting is not over-the-top like with the older models.
This one is double-cream. ABS bobbins, 4-conductor, as the Epi ES-339 Pro, where these came from, had coil-cutting.
The cover looks nice, and is nickelsilver made, nickel-plated.
To my surprise, they use two maple spacers, assembling'em like they did in the Shaw-era.
That's a detail of how they're assembled using two maple spacers.
Also, the ground and the shield are soldered together, but the south start is NOT soldered to the baseplate. Each start and finish of each coil go each in a different lead. I think it's done so because of the connector found. Meaning that each p'up was connected to a pot having a little circuit board attached. Maybe in a LP is alright, but in a semi-hollow I just don't see the advantage.
Epi Probuckers: a closer look
This is the Alnico Classic Pro neck, 7.76K@68°F. This design has a coil offset of about 100 Ohms, being the slug coil the strongest.
I'd say this p'up is based on the '57 Classic design. To my surprise, polepiece spread is 49.2mm.
The baseplate is nickelsilver-made. The slugs are chrome-plated and have the bull's eye. The screws are chrome-plated as well, looking vintage-y, if you ask me.
As you can see, wax-potting is not over-the-top like with the older models.
This one is Zebra. ABS bobbins, 4-conductor, as the Epi ES-339 Pro, where these came from, had coil-cutting. The cover looks nice, and is nickelsilver made, nickel-plated.
This is the Alnico Classic Pro bridge, 8.48K@68°F. Both coils measure exactly the same. Zero coil-offset.
I'd say this p'up is loosely-based on the '57 Classic Plus design, just a bit wimpier.
***EDIT: polepiece spread is 52mm. *** The baseplate is golden nickelsilver-made; the kind of alloy used in fretwire-making.
The slugs are chrome-plated and have the bull's eye. The screws are chrome-plated as well, looking vintage-y, if you ask me.
As you can see, wax-potting is not over-the-top like with the older models.
This one is double-cream. ABS bobbins, 4-conductor, as the Epi ES-339 Pro, where these came from, had coil-cutting.
The cover looks nice, and is nickelsilver made, nickel-plated.
To my surprise, they use two maple spacers, assembling'em like they did in the Shaw-era.
That's a detail of how they're assembled using two maple spacers.
Also, the ground and the shield are soldered together, but the south start is NOT soldered to the baseplate. Each start and finish of each coil go each in a different lead. I think it's done so because of the connector found. Meaning that each p'up was connected to a pot having a little circuit board attached. Maybe in a LP is alright, but in a semi-hollow I just don't see the advantage.
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