... the foregoing as I slap my forehead. Don't know why I didn't think of this before.
A humbucker is two single coils, arranged to be electrically additive for signal and cancelling for common mode. The hum is cancelled by the arrangement...
and signal components add depending on the characteristics of the individual coils.
It's not one pickup, it's two, added together. And it's built in a way that's magnetically asymmetrical, even if the coils are identical - which is usually not true.
Of course there is a huge variation and everything affects everything - it's not one pickup it's two. Each with its own inductance, resistance, coil capcitance and other fibbles and foibles, and then you add the two together.
For instance, the measured inductance (for instance) of a humbucker as a unit is a number that's actually the sum of two independent inductances, which each have their own effect on their half of the electrical sum. Likewise number of turns, likewise potting saturation, likewise coil scatter, likewise area fill of the winding window, likewise position along the string, and so on to all details.
Isolation of effects is important. Assume that a coil has a notch or peak in its response - not necessarily that it does have that, but assume that it does. Now take two non-identical coils and add their responses together. The response of the two added is more even than either separately, because they each fill in the opposite coil's peaks and valleys. Two response quirks that happen to fall on the same frequency reinforce.
You have to know the responses of each single coil before you can tease out the contribution of what you're doing to the whole pickup.
Sorry for my public epiphany. You guys probably already realized this all along, and use the non-identicality to tune pickups. It just took me a while to catch up.
A humbucker is two single coils, arranged to be electrically additive for signal and cancelling for common mode. The hum is cancelled by the arrangement...
and signal components add depending on the characteristics of the individual coils.
It's not one pickup, it's two, added together. And it's built in a way that's magnetically asymmetrical, even if the coils are identical - which is usually not true.
Of course there is a huge variation and everything affects everything - it's not one pickup it's two. Each with its own inductance, resistance, coil capcitance and other fibbles and foibles, and then you add the two together.
For instance, the measured inductance (for instance) of a humbucker as a unit is a number that's actually the sum of two independent inductances, which each have their own effect on their half of the electrical sum. Likewise number of turns, likewise potting saturation, likewise coil scatter, likewise area fill of the winding window, likewise position along the string, and so on to all details.
Isolation of effects is important. Assume that a coil has a notch or peak in its response - not necessarily that it does have that, but assume that it does. Now take two non-identical coils and add their responses together. The response of the two added is more even than either separately, because they each fill in the opposite coil's peaks and valleys. Two response quirks that happen to fall on the same frequency reinforce.
You have to know the responses of each single coil before you can tease out the contribution of what you're doing to the whole pickup.
Sorry for my public epiphany. You guys probably already realized this all along, and use the non-identicality to tune pickups. It just took me a while to catch up.
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