OK, you think that you have got the hang on things and then the real world catches up on you?
I have always been under the impression that more metal in the pickup = higher inductance, and high inductance = muddy top end. Now I have a set of fresh ones here (double slug bobbins, lot of metal in the coil) and finally a LCR meter. So I measure the Inductance without covers 9.23 H (@250Hz) and with covers 8.35H. The inductance drops 10% with covers on. Repeated that with an experimental set and although the nubers differt quite radical the tendency was the same. The cover made the inductance go down. I tried exchanging the ceramic magnet from the first set with an ALNICO one and the inductance went up to 9.86 = +7% (without cover). I thought that more or less all metal within the magnetic field boosts the inductance. Or is it only metal in the ?magnetic circuit? that boost the inductance? Or what?
And have I at all understood the connection between inductance and tone (high inductance = muddy top end)?
I really would appreciate some input on this.
I have always been under the impression that more metal in the pickup = higher inductance, and high inductance = muddy top end. Now I have a set of fresh ones here (double slug bobbins, lot of metal in the coil) and finally a LCR meter. So I measure the Inductance without covers 9.23 H (@250Hz) and with covers 8.35H. The inductance drops 10% with covers on. Repeated that with an experimental set and although the nubers differt quite radical the tendency was the same. The cover made the inductance go down. I tried exchanging the ceramic magnet from the first set with an ALNICO one and the inductance went up to 9.86 = +7% (without cover). I thought that more or less all metal within the magnetic field boosts the inductance. Or is it only metal in the ?magnetic circuit? that boost the inductance? Or what?
And have I at all understood the connection between inductance and tone (high inductance = muddy top end)?
I really would appreciate some input on this.
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