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DC Variations That Are Really Frustrating!

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  • #16
    Originally posted by jrdamien View Post
    I wind a coil to 5400 turns of 42 single poly. Same wire I've been using for years. Same technique. Same speed. Same tension. Same relative tpl (I hand wind so tension and tpl are unknown but my technique hasn't changed any).

    So 5400 turns regularly nets me 4.20 resistance for a humbuckering total of 8.4. I mean regularly. Like this is my go to wind.
    You don't need to worry about DC resistance. Just wind the way you always do. You wind to turns count and not resistance.

    After all you don't know what the temperature is going to be where the pickup gets installed.
    It would be possible to describe everything scientifically, but it would make no sense; it would be without meaning, as if you described a Beethoven symphony as a variation of wave pressure. — Albert Einstein


    http://coneyislandguitars.com
    www.soundcloud.com/davidravenmoon

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    • #17
      Originally posted by David Schwab View Post
      You don't need to worry about DC resistance. Just wind the way you always do. You wind to turns count and not resistance.

      After all you don't know what the temperature is going to be where the pickup gets installed.
      Many guitarists "need a number to hang their hat on" and have even figured out how to run a digital multimeter so they look for their favorithe "ohms reading" as the guide to which pickup will sound good for them. What wire gauge? "Daaaahh.... Idunno....does that mean something?" The good pro winders here and some other folks besides, have figured out yes it's turn numbers not resistance, but who can count turn numbers unless you're winding or trust your winder to count. So ... the ohm meter readers will continue to vex us.

      I've got one customer who measures his volume & tone pots too. If it's too far off his favorite 240K, it's not right for him. He's a helluva player, a good guy and pays his bills so I humor him.

      Try reading the pickup resistance just after the pickup's been removed from a hot wax bath.
      This isn't the future I signed up for.

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      • #18
        Originally posted by the great waldo View Post
        I'm sure fretwire manufacturer's aren't going out of their way to make life any easier for guitar makers. I did read somewhere a while ago that frets could be work hardened by burnishing after final polishing with a burnishing steel, any thoughts on that ?
        By the time you get enough energy worked up to make a change - either way - in the frets hardness "in situ" that is with the frets in place on the neck, I think you'll have that fret board smoldering.
        This isn't the future I signed up for.

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        • #19
          Originally posted by Leo_Gnardo View Post

          Try reading the pickup resistance just after the pickup's been removed from a hot wax bath.
          While not nearly as dramatic as after potting, I also find that the DCR of a s/c wind is ~ 125Ω higher right after it is wound than an hour or so later.
          Take Care,

          Jim. . .
          VA3DEF
          ____________________________________________________
          In the immortal words of Dr. Johnny Fever, “When everyone is out to get you, paranoid is just good thinking.”

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          • #20
            Hi Mick

            Thanks for the reply .
            I recently got the book by George Daniels on watchmaking but gave it away to my best friend. Another world but a good read.

            Cheers

            Andrew
            Originally posted by Mick Bailey View Post
            Burnishing does harden the surface very slightly and gives a much better finish in that it closes the minute scratches left after the final polish. It's a technique used a lot in clock making to improve bearing surfaces - a pivot file has two filing faces and two burnishing faces. There are also tapered burnishers to dress pivot holes. The value of burnishing frets depends on the particular alloy and existing state of work-hardening. It shouldn't be necessary if the wire is good to begin with.

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