The document is titled "Pickup Specifications", technically these are measurements. The specification is what the manufacturer intended, but what is in hand might (probably) vary from the specification. For example, the document says a particular Stratocaster pickup in 1962 had 8220 turns, but it's very not likely that Fender spec'd that turn count for that year.
Also I see them referred to as "hand wound", that's modern parlance in the market place, but technically they're hand guided and/or hand tensioned. I think only a few pickups in existence were actually wound by hand, one turn at a time.
For the purpose of recreating pickups, it would be arduous to collect turn counts of pickups, because it requires dismantling them and it's a lot of work, but with a $100 LCR meter you can record inductances without having to take them apart at all, and from that you would only have to determine how many turns it takes to arrive at that inductance, and upon doing so, you would have created a pickup that electronically performs like the target pickup. The turn count alone can be misleading if other factors affecting inductance aren't account for. For example, Wilde Pickups is offering an AlNiCo version of their microcoil, but it appears that they retained the same turn count, but because the AlNiCo has a lower permeability than the steel screws of the original, the inductance is a lot lower and it sounds a lot brighter, and that might not have been the intended outcome.
Also I see them referred to as "hand wound", that's modern parlance in the market place, but technically they're hand guided and/or hand tensioned. I think only a few pickups in existence were actually wound by hand, one turn at a time.
For the purpose of recreating pickups, it would be arduous to collect turn counts of pickups, because it requires dismantling them and it's a lot of work, but with a $100 LCR meter you can record inductances without having to take them apart at all, and from that you would only have to determine how many turns it takes to arrive at that inductance, and upon doing so, you would have created a pickup that electronically performs like the target pickup. The turn count alone can be misleading if other factors affecting inductance aren't account for. For example, Wilde Pickups is offering an AlNiCo version of their microcoil, but it appears that they retained the same turn count, but because the AlNiCo has a lower permeability than the steel screws of the original, the inductance is a lot lower and it sounds a lot brighter, and that might not have been the intended outcome.
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