Originally posted by Singer15
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Try this.
Obtain this magnet from K&J Magnetics . https://www.kjmagnetics.com/proddetail.asp?prod=BY042SH
This magnet is 2" long by .25" wide and .125" high. Cut up an old credit card for making the top and bottom plate about 2.5" long by .75" wide and glue to the magnet. If you use AWG 36 single build magnet wire it is about .0056" in diameter. https://mwswire.com/wp-content/uploa...-Wire-Data.pdf. This will allow you to machine wind (tightly wound) 22 winds per layer and with 22 layers make about a 500 turn pickup that would only need the top and bottom plastic plate to be about .5" wide. If you are not making a machine wind by doing it by hand, you will need more area for the coil.
Attach the coil wires to mic wire that is 2 conductor shielded cable. Place a thin stranded bare wire against the metal magnet coating before winding. Use an knife to cut plastic tape .125" wide to place a wind around the magnet binding the thin stranded wire to the metal coating on the magnet to ground it and keep the magnet wire from shorting out against the magnet coating. Run this 2 conductor shielded wire to an XLR connector and to either a mic mixer input with a 2400 ohm real input or a Shure mic matching transformer to boost this signal to be near what a 6000 turn high impedance pickup might produce but without the effects of coax capacitance on shaping the tone.
If there is noise and it stops when you touch the strings, the strings are re-transmitting noise into the pickup. In this case run a ground wire from the metal tailpiece to the ground connection in the pickup to minimize string induced noise.
Your most creative process will be mounting the pickup on your specific guitar. From the low tech method of using double stick tape to hold the pickup to using thin bungee cord warped around the end of the fingerboard to under the heel of the neck will help you mount it with minimal modification to your guitars.
I hope this helps?
Post a photo of your result.
Joseph J. Rogowski
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