Originally posted by R.G.
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Impulse response tests were common with speakers at one time for testing frequency response, until they found that you can get the same result with a pseudorandom noise signal, called a Maximal Length Sequence, or MLS. You get the same results as with an impulse, but without some of the difficulties of doing a real impulse test.
However, that test does not generate the instantaneous peak signal that a pickup might do, ...
However, that test does not generate the instantaneous peak signal that a pickup might do, ...
I find that a 10 microsecond pulse fed to a small drive coil next to the pickup works well. The pulse can be quite powerful, much reducing the effects of noise in the tail of the impulse. One still requires a digitizer to capture the transient. Synchronizing the digitizer to capture the transient is an issue. One can trigger on amplitude, or accept a synch pulse from the generator of the 10 uS drive pulses.
I've measured the impulse response of a number of pickups. The problem has been interpreting the impulse response function - they all look pretty much the same, and the translation into tone is unobvious.
I bet you're right there. Easy to use [BH loop testing] as a go-no-go test.
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