Having been busy elsewhere, it has been a while since I have posted on this forum. I thought I would share this current project here, just in case anyone might find it fairly interesting.
I’m looking to design a 4-string bass pickup that has a lot of punch coming out of a fairly small package. And while this prototype looks pretty deep, it measures about 1” wide. Although it’s not the most sensible design, I think it’s pretty cool.
This is the third prototype of my neodymium-powered multi-coil sidewinder project. I’ve been making refinements as I go. This round, I used some new parts I made from cast polyurethane. However, this prototype was only partially functional; I miscalculated the thickness of the bobbin flanges and the wire contacts would short out against each other. It’s an easy adjustment to fix.
The next issue is that the force of the super-strong neodymium magnets pull on the low E string enough so that as I play further up the neck, it kills the sustain and causes a vibrato effect. I have a few ideas about how to mitigate this effect, so I’ll have to try them out on the next round.
Despite not being completely functional, I will consider this stage of my experiment a success. The first big problem to solve was to design a bobbin and wind a coil that is small enough to fit in small space, durable enough to survive the assembly and encapsulation process, while being easy enough to fabricate a whole bunch of them at once. In prior attempts, I was working with paper bobbins and I soldered pigtails to the pickup wire and wrapped them with cloth tape. Because the bobbins were so small and delicate, I was having a lot of failures. The new bobbin design is much easier to manage, and I had no coil failures. In that sense, this experiment totally worked.
Previous (and completely functional) iterations have sounded promising. With the pickup in the bridge position, I’m getting some nice, thick but simultaneously bright tones. I could almost say I could support a rhythm section with a passive pickup - but the key operating term here is almost. For now, I am running it through a little two-band onboard preamp to boost the lows a teeny bit.
At this stage, I’m trying not to get too anxious about finishing this pickup. It’s tough though - I have a really nice bass I built for this pickup just waiting to be completed and played.
I’m looking to design a 4-string bass pickup that has a lot of punch coming out of a fairly small package. And while this prototype looks pretty deep, it measures about 1” wide. Although it’s not the most sensible design, I think it’s pretty cool.
This is the third prototype of my neodymium-powered multi-coil sidewinder project. I’ve been making refinements as I go. This round, I used some new parts I made from cast polyurethane. However, this prototype was only partially functional; I miscalculated the thickness of the bobbin flanges and the wire contacts would short out against each other. It’s an easy adjustment to fix.
The next issue is that the force of the super-strong neodymium magnets pull on the low E string enough so that as I play further up the neck, it kills the sustain and causes a vibrato effect. I have a few ideas about how to mitigate this effect, so I’ll have to try them out on the next round.
Despite not being completely functional, I will consider this stage of my experiment a success. The first big problem to solve was to design a bobbin and wind a coil that is small enough to fit in small space, durable enough to survive the assembly and encapsulation process, while being easy enough to fabricate a whole bunch of them at once. In prior attempts, I was working with paper bobbins and I soldered pigtails to the pickup wire and wrapped them with cloth tape. Because the bobbins were so small and delicate, I was having a lot of failures. The new bobbin design is much easier to manage, and I had no coil failures. In that sense, this experiment totally worked.
Previous (and completely functional) iterations have sounded promising. With the pickup in the bridge position, I’m getting some nice, thick but simultaneously bright tones. I could almost say I could support a rhythm section with a passive pickup - but the key operating term here is almost. For now, I am running it through a little two-band onboard preamp to boost the lows a teeny bit.
At this stage, I’m trying not to get too anxious about finishing this pickup. It’s tough though - I have a really nice bass I built for this pickup just waiting to be completed and played.
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