If the pissing match has died down, there were some useful things to talk about.
And that is one of the issues in question. Until recently, that wasn't even an option. But there are schemes now that makes this a possibility. We may be able to do that experiment soon.
The thing about low cost computers is that they enable you to do both. You can hand wind for variance, picking out the good ones. This scheme is in a sense what engineers now call genetic algorithms - using semi-randomized recombination of state vectors to get a sampling of the result space. This happens to turn up near optimal solutions which other directed algorithms don't.
But I'm reminded of the question about what to do when you find a gold nugget. When one is looking for gold, one searches until they either give up or find a nugget. Once you find a nugget, you have to choose - do you keep wandering around using the same search methods, or do you dig where you found the nugget?
It seems like once you find a nugget, you ought to dig there - that is, remember how you made the especially-great pickup, and replicate it. Or at least replicate it as closely as you can when that's the right pickup for the situation, playing style, player, guitar, phase of the moon, etc.
That's is an interesting conclusion. Is there agreement on that? Exact scatter doesn't matter, as long as it's scattered?
Also a good point. Has any testing been done on that?
I happen to be in the camp that Mother Nature doesn't care if someone's hand touched the wire as it went on the coil, and all that She cares about is the resulting coil, including all its minutae - wire positioning, tension, etc. I don't think She remembers who touched the wire after the coil is done.
And that's a good statement for why one ought to test and think about how the winding is done. Knowing what's good and selecting the final results to match what's good is what matters, right?
That's a fair enough statement.
Would you be willing to help (in a modest, non-time-interfering way) in trying to replicate a scatter pattern?
The issue of identical coils is a difficult one. How can they be identical unless you wind the first entirely by hand with a computer mapping every movement and then replicating that on the entirely machine-wound bobbin. I can't give you a difinite answer to the question of would they sound the same. I'd love to do the experiment for real but I don't have the time or the computer systems to do it.
The cachet attached to older hand-wound pickups is really more a reflection of the way in which hand-winding increases the variance across pickups such that some are true "tonal outliers", in a statistical sense; they weren't ALL winners - they couldn't be - but some were truly great and distinctive. At the other extreme, the need to run a business and have a product line, implies that one should respect the customer's expectations and provide a consistent product, and consistency implies mechanization and reduction of variance. If you could run a business doing ONLY hand-winds for wealthy customers willing to wait, and willing to accept the result, then you can afford to hand-wind in the purest sense. If your clientele expects to place an order and get a pickup with a known sound at a reasonable price within a reasonable period of time, AND your landlord likes the rent cheque delivered on time, then many aspects of hand-winding will need to be set aside in favour of mechanization.
But I'm reminded of the question about what to do when you find a gold nugget. When one is looking for gold, one searches until they either give up or find a nugget. Once you find a nugget, you have to choose - do you keep wandering around using the same search methods, or do you dig where you found the nugget?
It seems like once you find a nugget, you ought to dig there - that is, remember how you made the especially-great pickup, and replicate it. Or at least replicate it as closely as you can when that's the right pickup for the situation, playing style, player, guitar, phase of the moon, etc.
That's a good point about repeatability. As random as hand guided winding is (I still call it "hand winding" because not too many people ever actually hold the bobbin in their hand), I think we can agree that once you come up with a formula, they do all sound the same. And that's a good thing.
I know we've had this discussion in the past, but it seems that there is a difference between a neatly machine wound coil, and one with a scatter pattern. It doesn't seem to matter what the scatter pattern is, as long as it has some randomness to it.
I know we've had this discussion in the past, but it seems that there is a difference between a neatly machine wound coil, and one with a scatter pattern. It doesn't seem to matter what the scatter pattern is, as long as it has some randomness to it.
Is there varying degrees of scatter? Or does it just affect the size and tension of the coil?
If I had the opportunity to try winding pickups on a CNC winder, I would. There are a lot of great sounding pickups out there that are not hand wound, so I think, and this is my opinion, that if you can program the correct tension and scatter, you shouldn't be able to tell the difference.
It might even be that those settings must vary as the coil is wound. I'm sure I don't apply consistent tension as I wind, as I often change the speed of the winder to see what I'm doing, and I know the scatter is random.
What leads me to think this is hand carving guitar necks. If you have a nice neck shape and carve it on a CNC router, what's the difference? It's more precise, and you can see that. I have a Warmoth neck here that a customer supplied for a guitar I'm putting together from parts. I don't care for the feel of the neck, but it's nicely made. The Warmoth brothers don't play guitar, so how would they know how to shape a neck?
But I'd love a CNC setup. It would allow me to remove the drudgery of building, and still make the parts the way I want. I love carving necks, but some of the stuff is just tedious and a lot of work!
What leads me to think this is hand carving guitar necks. If you have a nice neck shape and carve it on a CNC router, what's the difference? It's more precise, and you can see that. I have a Warmoth neck here that a customer supplied for a guitar I'm putting together from parts. I don't care for the feel of the neck, but it's nicely made. The Warmoth brothers don't play guitar, so how would they know how to shape a neck?
But I'd love a CNC setup. It would allow me to remove the drudgery of building, and still make the parts the way I want. I love carving necks, but some of the stuff is just tedious and a lot of work!
There's a few people like Don Mare who swear by a precise, repeatable scatter patter. I've never been able to repeat a scater pattern so I tend to agree with you Dave that just so long as it's random it works.
If I thought a CNC could turn out consistently brilliant pickups that sound as good as mine I'd be tempted to use one. But whilst I am not convinced and no one has been able to show me proof I am going to stay with hand winding.
If I thought a CNC could turn out consistently brilliant pickups that sound as good as mine I'd be tempted to use one. But whilst I am not convinced and no one has been able to show me proof I am going to stay with hand winding.
Would you be willing to help (in a modest, non-time-interfering way) in trying to replicate a scatter pattern?
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