I have to tell you Possum that since I've been coming around to this part of the forum (my 'home' btw is tube guitar amps), you have in this thread and many others I've read displayed a knowledge about PAF's and vintage style pickups which is absolutely unparalleled in comparison to pretty much anyone else who has actually put it all into words (and those informational YT videos you made were also absolutely enlightening). For sure if I come across anyone looking for a PAF style pickup in the future, yours will be the first on my mind to recommend. As for me, my goal with my recent fling with pickups isn't about duplicating any particular type of sound or even making a business out of it aside from here and there situations; actually the primary reason I built a winding machine was to do tube amp transformers and chokes but since the principle of operation is basically the same and me finally becoming sick to death of the cardboard toned p/u's in my guitars, the intention is to wind some pickups for my current guitars before moving onto the heavy electro-magnetics. I figure though since pickups are my focus at the moment, I might as well have good/in depth information at my disposal that will help make this effort worth while.
As to the topic(s) at hand; this whole metallurgy thing about the copper is one thing but as far as I'm concerned about pole-pieces, I'd use mu-metal or metglas if I could for maximum efficiency in coupling to the coils and use other means of altering the magnetic characteristics. Again, when it comes to creating pups along totally accurate vintage specs and response, I'll leave that to the experts The copper issue is something that holds a particular interest with me in that among every boutique tube amp transformer manufacturer big and small, the possibility that the wire being used to wind transformers prior to 1965 (that includes every Fender amp that is considered classic today) was different in composition has never even been thought of by anyone previously. What you were saying Possum about the enamel having a different dielectric characteristic than modern enamels is also something I will look into at some point soon as this is another important aspect which will impact a coil's interaction with itself; again this is something that could be taken into consideration in winding vintage spec output transformers. You've mentioned Possum that your research into vintage magnet wire is ongoing; would you perhaps be interested in receiving some larger gauge magnet wire samples from pre-1960's transformers? Being that magnet wire of any size comes from the same copper rod feedstock with only the number of drawing stages which vary between the sizes (I believe this is the reason why the AWG scale ascends as the size decreases), it should be the same stuff only larger and easier to analyze, lol. I figure especially on the particularly large diameter wire winds like filaments and output transformer secondaries, even a common microscope (like the kind found in high school science labs) could easily see the 'grain' of the wire in order to visually detect any anomalies within it; with #42 I'm sure would require something like an electron microscope to do the same.
As to the topic(s) at hand; this whole metallurgy thing about the copper is one thing but as far as I'm concerned about pole-pieces, I'd use mu-metal or metglas if I could for maximum efficiency in coupling to the coils and use other means of altering the magnetic characteristics. Again, when it comes to creating pups along totally accurate vintage specs and response, I'll leave that to the experts The copper issue is something that holds a particular interest with me in that among every boutique tube amp transformer manufacturer big and small, the possibility that the wire being used to wind transformers prior to 1965 (that includes every Fender amp that is considered classic today) was different in composition has never even been thought of by anyone previously. What you were saying Possum about the enamel having a different dielectric characteristic than modern enamels is also something I will look into at some point soon as this is another important aspect which will impact a coil's interaction with itself; again this is something that could be taken into consideration in winding vintage spec output transformers. You've mentioned Possum that your research into vintage magnet wire is ongoing; would you perhaps be interested in receiving some larger gauge magnet wire samples from pre-1960's transformers? Being that magnet wire of any size comes from the same copper rod feedstock with only the number of drawing stages which vary between the sizes (I believe this is the reason why the AWG scale ascends as the size decreases), it should be the same stuff only larger and easier to analyze, lol. I figure especially on the particularly large diameter wire winds like filaments and output transformer secondaries, even a common microscope (like the kind found in high school science labs) could easily see the 'grain' of the wire in order to visually detect any anomalies within it; with #42 I'm sure would require something like an electron microscope to do the same.
Comment