Originally posted by Helmholtz
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A bifilar coil wouldn't necessarily prove a relationship between uneven winding and secondary resonances, though. I would be interested in making a pickup that deliberately emphasizes a secondary resonance, in order to better understand existing pickups, but I don't think a bifilar coil truly approximates that, since existing pickups are not bifilar. I personally don't find winding pickup to be an enjoyable process, and it hurts my eyes to guide the wire onto the spinning bobbin, so it's not something I do readily.
I think a better test pickup might be one where the coil is intentionally wound extremely lopsided at first, and then balanced out as the wind is completed, so that the majority of the early winds would be on one side of the coil former, and the latter winds on the other. This would be like a stacked coil, except but without a significant division between the two halves.
I have also found Strat pickups to have unusually high or low Q factors, but that can also be attributed to defective formulations of AlNiCo, which was supported by the fact that the pole pieces had lower residual flux values than was to be expected.
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