Originally posted by Bagpipe
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Use Multi-Section Windings to Reduce Self-Capacitance
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Originally posted by Bagpipe- What about horizontal field arrangement? North left/South right
-rb
PS- The sun is shining here for the first time in 2 weeks. See you guys later.Last edited by rjb; 05-20-2018, 08:09 PM.DON'T FEED THE TROLLS!
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Originally posted by ken View PostIf you make a Jazzmaster type guitar pickup with six coils to reduce the pickup's capacitance, wouldn't this pickup be impossible to use 'normally' aka in a passive instrument's wiring environment? I think you would have to use a preamp with some strong toneshaping to sound anything like its passive counterpart.
This is interesting. Would the cable capacitance of whatever the guitar cord is made of make a bigger difference to the sound than the pickup capacitance? I remember some people using coily guitar cords for this reason.
Ken
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Originally posted by Bagpipemike: Flux created by Current. I have to let that sag. Sorry... i don't seem to understand your words, nor the sense of your words. You have a static magnetic field - and you have a coil (or a split-coil) inside it. Do we still talk about the same issue here? Or are you ran away into transformers?
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Originally posted by BagpipeAntigua:
What happens to the resonance peak with increased series resistance OR increased Eddy Currents (almost the same)??
Originally posted by BagpipeWinding to Winding magnetic coupling? What are you talking about? There is no drop in inductance. Simple as that. A Split Bobbin Inductor has almost EXACTLY the same inductance as a single bobbin inductor. WHY should inductance fall?
Originally posted by BagpipeWhen you turn the volume down on your guitar, what happens to series resistance seen by the amp? And what happens to miller effect?
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Originally posted by Joe Gwinn View PostOne can compensate for reduced winding space by using the next finer wire size. Unless the separators are fairly thick, inductance won't be much affected, so long as the same total number of turns is used. Cable capacitance is of course unaffected, but reducing the self-capacitance of the pickup increases our wiggle room.
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Originally posted by Bagpipe View PostPlease read again, what you write. It is nonsense. Really. Not because i dislike you, but beacuse it is utter nonsense.
The varying mag. field is in truth a static magnetic field, which is disturbed by the string. This disturbance causes a disturbance in the coil - more turns - more pronounciated.
Current plays absolutely NO ROLE - except we talk of the effects of the load.
Sorry Mike - you must know, that i bear GREAT RESPECT for you. You may not be aware of it, but your publications are with me for at least 3 years now. I regard you as a star in the scene. But with this topic here, i just lose understanding for your points. Sorry. I don't want to offend you.
Inductance is a property of an electrical conductor which opposes a change in current.[1] It does that by storing and releasing energy from a magnetic fieldsurrounding the conductor when current flows, according to Faraday's law of induction. When current rises, energy (as magnetic flux) is stored in the field, reducing the current and causing a drop in potential (i.e., a voltage) across the conductor; when current falls, energy is released from the field supplying current and causing a rise in potential across the conductor. Mutual inductance describes the change of current in a circuit when a second circuit also experiences a change of current; energy is coupled from one circuit to the other through magnetic fields.
These effects are derived from two fundamental observations of physics: a steady current creates a steady magnetic field described by Oersted's law,[2] and a time-varying magnetic field induces an electromotive force (EMF) in nearby conductors, which is described by Faraday's law of induction.[3] According to Lenz's law,[4] a changing electric current through a circuit that contains inductance induces a proportional voltage, which opposes the change in current (self-inductance). The varying field in this circuit may also induce an EMF in neighbouring circuits (mutual inductance).
The circuit component representing inductance is called an inductor. The term inductance was coined by Oliver Heaviside in 1886.[5]
Pickups cannot be understood by this "disturb the static magnetic field" thing. You need to apply Faraday's law. For example, check MacDonald (Princeton).
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Originally posted by Bagpipe View PostPlease read again, what you write. It is nonsense. Really. Not because i dislike you, but beacuse it is utter nonsense.
The varying mag. field is in truth a static magnetic field, which is disturbed by the string. This disturbance causes a disturbance in the coil - more turns - more pronounciated.
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Originally posted by Bagpipe View PostThey are identical - except for the frequency dependence of eddies.
This is Transformer-Speak. Lets get back to the basics. We have an inductive sensor here. It is not just: Look the other way around at it. It is not that easy.
No - i don't. Sorry - i am no answering questions machine. And double *NOT* with people, who play - but not *are* true with their questions.
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