I once made a guitar humbucker like this. It had 4 sets of three poles divided high strings vs low strings. Each set of three had it's own output (8 wire+ ground). The "sides" were wound as humbuckers (high/low) AND the coils were wound humbucking (front/back).
Even using 46awg (might have been 45awg, don't remember?)the turn counts were low. Due to the low turn counts the finer wire did not have the "choking effect" usually associated. Due to the opposite polarity of the "sides" within the same coil it did have the odd transition spot in the middle...not good for a position with much string deviation or bending. This was for the bridge position.
Definitely need a preamp, unless maybe "straight to board".
Bench testing showed good tonality and a smooth/wide response curve. I did not have a preamp or a guitar wired to accept such a beast so I did not play it.
This was obviously a custom "one off", and as far as I know it was a success for it's intended use. (initially got good feedback; never heard anything else back). Even so, it was way too big a PITA to produce regularly (or ever again). *IF* I had custom parts pre-manufactured and a few more details already worked out, it might not have been so bad/ time consuming to make. Even then, I'm not sure it would be worth "producing"; it had very specific requirements/limitations which makes it a "custom application only" design IMO.
The general idea of "coil per string" has been around a long time and attempted/produced more than once. (most applications I've heard of are custom jobs for custom instruments)
Even using 46awg (might have been 45awg, don't remember?)the turn counts were low. Due to the low turn counts the finer wire did not have the "choking effect" usually associated. Due to the opposite polarity of the "sides" within the same coil it did have the odd transition spot in the middle...not good for a position with much string deviation or bending. This was for the bridge position.
Definitely need a preamp, unless maybe "straight to board".
Bench testing showed good tonality and a smooth/wide response curve. I did not have a preamp or a guitar wired to accept such a beast so I did not play it.
This was obviously a custom "one off", and as far as I know it was a success for it's intended use. (initially got good feedback; never heard anything else back). Even so, it was way too big a PITA to produce regularly (or ever again). *IF* I had custom parts pre-manufactured and a few more details already worked out, it might not have been so bad/ time consuming to make. Even then, I'm not sure it would be worth "producing"; it had very specific requirements/limitations which makes it a "custom application only" design IMO.
The general idea of "coil per string" has been around a long time and attempted/produced more than once. (most applications I've heard of are custom jobs for custom instruments)
Comment