I've read a lot of the discussion on this forum about eddy currents, and most of it seems to have to do with frequency response -- that stuff makes sense to me. But I haven't found much about the relationship of eddy current interference and hum/buzz.
I'm curious because I have a custom all-aluminum guitar made by the guy who is doing the Travis Bean 'reissues' -- EGC in Florida. The guitar came with his in-house humbuckers which are based on the Travis Bean HBs (not the early WRH ones). They have the big alnico slugs set into a VERY thick steel baseplate, and epoxy-potted. They are fairly high output but also quite bright, as the Beans were known to be. They're bolted through the back of the neck, and not height-adjustable.
The sound of those pickups is not just a product of the aluminum neck/body, because I retrofitted the thing with vintage Gibson Dirty Fingers pickups. The sound was much more 'traditional' with these (if you could call the DFs that, though still much more 'normal' than the Bean-style pickups). I added nickel-silver covers to the DFs and wax-potted them to maintain the look of the EGC pickups. I mounted the DFs in chrome-plated brass rings.
My question comes because of how differently this guitar responds to EMI than my other guitars. I had these vintage DFs in two other guitars prior to this, and they didn't hum at all, even with enormous gain. When they are out of the guitar, on the bench, they do NOT hum (I am looking at the hum on a scope). As I lower them by hand into the aluminum top of the guitar body, I can see the hum increase to 15mVp-p on the scope. It peaks when the top of the pickup is flush with the top of the aluminum body. The neck position does it more than the bridge position (6mVp-p). Again, both pickups have negligible hum (not perceptible on the scope) when in other guitars or out on the bench.
I have coil taps on both of these, and both hum LESS in the single coil mode (regardless of which coil is selected) than in humbucking mode, when they are in the guitar. Out of the guitar, they only hum in single coil mode.
Now to the EGC pickups. They hum whether in OR out of the guitar. There is NO DIFFERENCE in how much they hum whether in or out of the guitar. Like the DFs-in-guitar, they ALSO hum LESS in single coil mode than in humbucking mode, but again in OR out of the guitar. Except for this fact -- they only hum in a few certain places (my workroom in my house being the main one, ugh). But when they do hum, that hum is a LOT louder than the DFs when in this guitar. But in other places they are dead quiet.
(Fact about my house: it has wiring problems, I know this. Two circuits have the polarity reversed and have open grounds, and one circuit in my workroom has an open ground but a GFI that ties the safety ground to the neutral right there -- meaning that the 3rd prong on that circuit is about 2VAC above true earth. So there is a lot of interference, yes -- but my wood guitars DO NOT HUM even with these same DFs installed.)
So my question is admittedly vague, but here it is: are eddy currents in the aluminum body/neck of the guitar responsible for the DFs' behavior? Are the super-thick steel baseplates responsible for the EGC pickups getting so much more interference in here? Is the effect of the baseplates in those pickups swamping the effect of the aluminum body somehow?
I guess I'm asking for help teasing out several interrelated factors. I like the EGCs enough that I've put them back in the guitar. Note: no difference in their behavior with the brass rings compared to before. So anyway, this is mostly moot from a practical standpoint. But I do want to understand what's happening here.
I'm curious because I have a custom all-aluminum guitar made by the guy who is doing the Travis Bean 'reissues' -- EGC in Florida. The guitar came with his in-house humbuckers which are based on the Travis Bean HBs (not the early WRH ones). They have the big alnico slugs set into a VERY thick steel baseplate, and epoxy-potted. They are fairly high output but also quite bright, as the Beans were known to be. They're bolted through the back of the neck, and not height-adjustable.
The sound of those pickups is not just a product of the aluminum neck/body, because I retrofitted the thing with vintage Gibson Dirty Fingers pickups. The sound was much more 'traditional' with these (if you could call the DFs that, though still much more 'normal' than the Bean-style pickups). I added nickel-silver covers to the DFs and wax-potted them to maintain the look of the EGC pickups. I mounted the DFs in chrome-plated brass rings.
My question comes because of how differently this guitar responds to EMI than my other guitars. I had these vintage DFs in two other guitars prior to this, and they didn't hum at all, even with enormous gain. When they are out of the guitar, on the bench, they do NOT hum (I am looking at the hum on a scope). As I lower them by hand into the aluminum top of the guitar body, I can see the hum increase to 15mVp-p on the scope. It peaks when the top of the pickup is flush with the top of the aluminum body. The neck position does it more than the bridge position (6mVp-p). Again, both pickups have negligible hum (not perceptible on the scope) when in other guitars or out on the bench.
I have coil taps on both of these, and both hum LESS in the single coil mode (regardless of which coil is selected) than in humbucking mode, when they are in the guitar. Out of the guitar, they only hum in single coil mode.
Now to the EGC pickups. They hum whether in OR out of the guitar. There is NO DIFFERENCE in how much they hum whether in or out of the guitar. Like the DFs-in-guitar, they ALSO hum LESS in single coil mode than in humbucking mode, but again in OR out of the guitar. Except for this fact -- they only hum in a few certain places (my workroom in my house being the main one, ugh). But when they do hum, that hum is a LOT louder than the DFs when in this guitar. But in other places they are dead quiet.
(Fact about my house: it has wiring problems, I know this. Two circuits have the polarity reversed and have open grounds, and one circuit in my workroom has an open ground but a GFI that ties the safety ground to the neutral right there -- meaning that the 3rd prong on that circuit is about 2VAC above true earth. So there is a lot of interference, yes -- but my wood guitars DO NOT HUM even with these same DFs installed.)
So my question is admittedly vague, but here it is: are eddy currents in the aluminum body/neck of the guitar responsible for the DFs' behavior? Are the super-thick steel baseplates responsible for the EGC pickups getting so much more interference in here? Is the effect of the baseplates in those pickups swamping the effect of the aluminum body somehow?
I guess I'm asking for help teasing out several interrelated factors. I like the EGCs enough that I've put them back in the guitar. Note: no difference in their behavior with the brass rings compared to before. So anyway, this is mostly moot from a practical standpoint. But I do want to understand what's happening here.
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