I understand that the self resonance of a pickup reveals something about the sonic character of a particular pickup. However, unless the pickup maker reveals how that measurement is taken, it could be meaningless.
I just received a Lace Alumitone, single coil size (to fit a Strat-like guitar) pickup and read the specifications on the Lace web site as follows; resistance: 2.5K; Resonant peak: 2343Hz; Inductance: 16.74H.
I put this pickup on my signal generator through a 1M resistor to isolate it from the signal generator output impedance, set my scope probe on the 10:1 setting for a lower capacitance loading and guess what... it's self resonance measured out at 9.5KHz. One decimal place is sufficient for this type of measurement due to the variables involved in the measurement process.
Is there a standard way that pickups resonances are measured such as alone; with the volume pot connected, a 10ft, 300 pf coax cable connected or some other standard loading?
If not, then all the self resonance measurements, while possibly being useful for comparing pickups within one brand, may be useless for comparing pickups between brands.
The Lace publication of a resonance being exactly 2343Hz creates a sense of accuracy that may not be practically achievable, duplicatable or verifible without a whole lot more information about how that measurement was achieved.
Does anyone have any insight into this matter?
Thanks
Joseph Rogowski
I just received a Lace Alumitone, single coil size (to fit a Strat-like guitar) pickup and read the specifications on the Lace web site as follows; resistance: 2.5K; Resonant peak: 2343Hz; Inductance: 16.74H.
I put this pickup on my signal generator through a 1M resistor to isolate it from the signal generator output impedance, set my scope probe on the 10:1 setting for a lower capacitance loading and guess what... it's self resonance measured out at 9.5KHz. One decimal place is sufficient for this type of measurement due to the variables involved in the measurement process.
Is there a standard way that pickups resonances are measured such as alone; with the volume pot connected, a 10ft, 300 pf coax cable connected or some other standard loading?
If not, then all the self resonance measurements, while possibly being useful for comparing pickups within one brand, may be useless for comparing pickups between brands.
The Lace publication of a resonance being exactly 2343Hz creates a sense of accuracy that may not be practically achievable, duplicatable or verifible without a whole lot more information about how that measurement was achieved.
Does anyone have any insight into this matter?
Thanks
Joseph Rogowski
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