This project is in some ways the offspring of my previous (failed/abandoned) project:
Multi-Coil Prototype - Wal-Style Pickup For Guitar
In that design, I had intended to have the coils be small enough that they could be squeezed together on the bass side, and spread apart on the treble side.
Example, though here I'm holding it rotated 180-degrees like a derp.
The idea is that I want to get a more "focused" sound on the bass side, for tighter lows, a shift towards upper mids by moving the North coil closer to the bridge, and hopefully attributes that would align with high-gain applications in general. The hope for the treble side is that it would either retain a typical humbucker sound, by using narrower, taller coils, it would provide a more "vocal" or throaty sound with smoother highs.
Given the dimensional space that I have to work within, the standard humbucker routes probably don't afford enough space for this design to get a significant effect from the physical design, but hopefully the accumulated subtle differences in design would still culminate in a perceptible change to the tone.
I haven't known what to refer to this design as, I've thought of calling it a "variable aperture" design, but I see people refer to the coil itself as having an aperture, so I found some old-timey word that also describes the space between two things and used that instead. So, I give you, the "Variable Interstice Pickup"
I'd trademark it, but that would be like... Effort.
My multi-coil design suffered from the fact that I wanted to connect everything in parallel, and, not understanding the physics at the time, would have needed a preamp to achieve my desired goals. So I scrapped the design, having not enough expertise to create a preamp.
I decided to just do a typical 2-coil design, but with taller, narrower coils like a typical Strat pickup, and a "Variable Interstice" by way of angling the North Coil so that the bass side was closer to the bridge, reversing the angle of a typical Strat.
I had the option of using Alnico pole pieces or steel slugs with little Neodymium button magnets on the back, because obviously a single bar magnet wouldn't work for this. I decided to go with Jumbo Steel Slugs and Neodymium magnets.
Started by modeling the bobbins on a typical 7-String Passive Humbucker, as that was the mounting bracket my Squier has routed into its pickguard at the moment, for reasons that are numerous and mostly having to do with horribly failed mods
Cut some Forbon, I think it was .063"? I don't remember. The pole pieces are just 1018 steel in .25" and I cut it all by hand with a Hacksaw. Just marked every .75" or so and cut it. I drilled little 1/16" holes and then used a 1/4" Forstner bit to drill them out bigger.
You can see some of the crummy drilling templates I made out of MDF, which didn't work all that well, but were better than eyeballing it.
Closeup of complete Bobbin. It just applied glue and kind of eyeballed the placement. It's bad, but it technically worked.
Visual comparison of my bobbins compared to a standard Passive 7-String Humbucker.
I've made much more progress at this point, but I have to go drink beer and eat fried chicken so I'll have to post about winding bobbins tomorrow
Multi-Coil Prototype - Wal-Style Pickup For Guitar
In that design, I had intended to have the coils be small enough that they could be squeezed together on the bass side, and spread apart on the treble side.
Example, though here I'm holding it rotated 180-degrees like a derp.
The idea is that I want to get a more "focused" sound on the bass side, for tighter lows, a shift towards upper mids by moving the North coil closer to the bridge, and hopefully attributes that would align with high-gain applications in general. The hope for the treble side is that it would either retain a typical humbucker sound, by using narrower, taller coils, it would provide a more "vocal" or throaty sound with smoother highs.
Given the dimensional space that I have to work within, the standard humbucker routes probably don't afford enough space for this design to get a significant effect from the physical design, but hopefully the accumulated subtle differences in design would still culminate in a perceptible change to the tone.
I haven't known what to refer to this design as, I've thought of calling it a "variable aperture" design, but I see people refer to the coil itself as having an aperture, so I found some old-timey word that also describes the space between two things and used that instead. So, I give you, the "Variable Interstice Pickup"
I'd trademark it, but that would be like... Effort.
My multi-coil design suffered from the fact that I wanted to connect everything in parallel, and, not understanding the physics at the time, would have needed a preamp to achieve my desired goals. So I scrapped the design, having not enough expertise to create a preamp.
I decided to just do a typical 2-coil design, but with taller, narrower coils like a typical Strat pickup, and a "Variable Interstice" by way of angling the North Coil so that the bass side was closer to the bridge, reversing the angle of a typical Strat.
I had the option of using Alnico pole pieces or steel slugs with little Neodymium button magnets on the back, because obviously a single bar magnet wouldn't work for this. I decided to go with Jumbo Steel Slugs and Neodymium magnets.
Started by modeling the bobbins on a typical 7-String Passive Humbucker, as that was the mounting bracket my Squier has routed into its pickguard at the moment, for reasons that are numerous and mostly having to do with horribly failed mods
Cut some Forbon, I think it was .063"? I don't remember. The pole pieces are just 1018 steel in .25" and I cut it all by hand with a Hacksaw. Just marked every .75" or so and cut it. I drilled little 1/16" holes and then used a 1/4" Forstner bit to drill them out bigger.
You can see some of the crummy drilling templates I made out of MDF, which didn't work all that well, but were better than eyeballing it.
Closeup of complete Bobbin. It just applied glue and kind of eyeballed the placement. It's bad, but it technically worked.
Visual comparison of my bobbins compared to a standard Passive 7-String Humbucker.
I've made much more progress at this point, but I have to go drink beer and eat fried chicken so I'll have to post about winding bobbins tomorrow
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