LCR meters...
Just measuring inductance isn't all that useful, the reason is on some pickups they will meausre real low because of added metal like a P90 for instance or a tele bridge. Measure a tele bridge then add the base plate and measure again, the inductance goes DOWN not up. Counterintuitive, you think you're making the pickup brighter because the inductance goes down but you're making the pickup darker in truth. So you need to read the AC resistance and Q as well and take the readings as a whole. The only decent meter that does all this is the Extech LCR meter that most of us use. You also need to take readings at both test frequencies 120hz and 1000hz because whats happening in the bass frequencies isn't the same as whats happening in the higher frequencies. The big bummer in all this is you can't use a 10khz test signal, according to Joe Gwinn, because the readings at that range in pickups becomes nonsensical. Sucks because there is stuff happening up in those frequencies the LCR meter doesn't see, so you might get two identical readings for a pickup yet one will have noticeable treble glassiness and the other won't. I've tried frequency analysis for that range but found it not very useful either, so you end up having to put the pickup in a guitar and listening. The LCR meter also doesn't see the shape of the frequency response so again 2 identical reading pickups again may not sound similar in the real world. ITs a very useful tool but is also very limited for real world. I use it to record changes in variations of design that I can refer back to, mostly.....
Just measuring inductance isn't all that useful, the reason is on some pickups they will meausre real low because of added metal like a P90 for instance or a tele bridge. Measure a tele bridge then add the base plate and measure again, the inductance goes DOWN not up. Counterintuitive, you think you're making the pickup brighter because the inductance goes down but you're making the pickup darker in truth. So you need to read the AC resistance and Q as well and take the readings as a whole. The only decent meter that does all this is the Extech LCR meter that most of us use. You also need to take readings at both test frequencies 120hz and 1000hz because whats happening in the bass frequencies isn't the same as whats happening in the higher frequencies. The big bummer in all this is you can't use a 10khz test signal, according to Joe Gwinn, because the readings at that range in pickups becomes nonsensical. Sucks because there is stuff happening up in those frequencies the LCR meter doesn't see, so you might get two identical readings for a pickup yet one will have noticeable treble glassiness and the other won't. I've tried frequency analysis for that range but found it not very useful either, so you end up having to put the pickup in a guitar and listening. The LCR meter also doesn't see the shape of the frequency response so again 2 identical reading pickups again may not sound similar in the real world. ITs a very useful tool but is also very limited for real world. I use it to record changes in variations of design that I can refer back to, mostly.....
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