Originally posted by David Schwab
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EMG active pickups preamp circiut schematic.
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Originally posted by Dave Kerr View PostDon't the tremelo block/bar/springs serve as a core for the Suhr system, or is the tremelo assembly off-plane enough to not have an effect on the inductance?
Here's the patent application:
#20050204905It would be possible to describe everything scientifically, but it would make no sense; it would be without meaning, as if you described a Beethoven symphony as a variation of wave pressure. — Albert Einstein
http://coneyislandguitars.com
www.soundcloud.com/davidravenmoon
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Winding on ceramic is like winding an air core coil. Winding on a metal magnet...like Alnico...or on ferrous pole pieces changes the inductance as well as adding an eddy current factor. You could probably work up a pretty good match between a ceramic core and metallic core set of coils with different numbers of turns.
Note, however, the hoops (R/C networks) that Suhr uses to make the harmonic structure of induced hum match between the large Low Z coil and the single coil pickups. And not having looked at that recently, he must also do some kind of level switching to deal with positions 2 and 4 on the pickup selector switch. The center pickup IS NOT RWRP in that circuit.
Re. Alembic... The info presented here is not quite right. The very earliest guitars and basses...1971-'72 used a passive air (actually Plexiglas) core humcancelling coil that was identical in size, shape, and winds to the ceramic cored pickups. Then in around late 1972, we switched to the differential preamp design which used one humcancelling coil that was generally smaller than the pickup coils, and the induced hum was electronically subtracted after buffering. So we had three FET buffers (pickup, pickup, humcanceller) followed by the two op-amp differential preamps. Each channel had a gain control and a hum null trim pot.
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Originally posted by Rick Turner View PostNote, however, the hoops (R/C networks) that Suhr uses to make the harmonic structure of induced hum match between the large Low Z coil and the single coil pickups. And not having looked at that recently, he must also do some kind of level switching to deal with positions 2 and 4 on the pickup selector switch. The center pickup IS NOT RWRP in that circuit.
Re. Alembic... The info presented here is not quite right. The very earliest guitars and basses...1971-'72 used a passive air (actually Plexiglas) core humcancelling coil that was identical in size, shape, and winds to the ceramic cored pickups. Then in around late 1972, we switched to the differential preamp design which used one humcancelling coil that was generally smaller than the pickup coils, and the induced hum was electronically subtracted after buffering. So we had three FET buffers (pickup, pickup, humcanceller) followed by the two op-amp differential preamps. Each channel had a gain control and a hum null trim pot.
I have the series I and II preamp schematic, which is what you are talking about.
They seem to be quite different from the pickups you designed. I had a set here, as well as a set of Activator jazz pickups, and they read about 7-8K, which seems a lot higher than I thought the original pickups were. They are very low output too.
I'd love to hear more about the Series I pickups.It would be possible to describe everything scientifically, but it would make no sense; it would be without meaning, as if you described a Beethoven symphony as a variation of wave pressure. — Albert Einstein
http://coneyislandguitars.com
www.soundcloud.com/davidravenmoon
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