I was checking one of these out at the work shop the other day. My partner was putting one in a guitar he just finished and he had to made some modifications to the baseplate, so he removed it.
The interesting stuff is all under the pickup. What looks like studs from the top are actually flat heads on studs that are the same diameter as the screws. So the screws and studs are the same, just made to look different. The screws also end at the bottom of the pickup, and don't extend out the back.
There was no keeper, and the A5 magnet doesn't touch either the screws or studs. There's a small air gap between them (the magnet is glued to the bottom of the bobbins).
Lastly, both bobbins have extra slug sized pieces of metal added between the screws or studs that are flush with the bottom of the bobbin, and aren't visible from the top. These increase the inductance.
I haven't heard the pickup, but he reports that they sound very good.
Each coil was 4.3K.
Seemed like an interesting approach to making a vintage sounding pickup.
The interesting stuff is all under the pickup. What looks like studs from the top are actually flat heads on studs that are the same diameter as the screws. So the screws and studs are the same, just made to look different. The screws also end at the bottom of the pickup, and don't extend out the back.
There was no keeper, and the A5 magnet doesn't touch either the screws or studs. There's a small air gap between them (the magnet is glued to the bottom of the bobbins).
Lastly, both bobbins have extra slug sized pieces of metal added between the screws or studs that are flush with the bottom of the bobbin, and aren't visible from the top. These increase the inductance.
I haven't heard the pickup, but he reports that they sound very good.
Each coil was 4.3K.
Seemed like an interesting approach to making a vintage sounding pickup.
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