I have a 2 part question. I was reading a bunch of Bill Lawrence stuff today and was curious about the nature of the "decay" he referred to in the excerpt below from one of his articles and if it was something that was measurable by the hobbyist?
"I have measured the magnets of numerous and beautifully sweet sounding vintage strat pickups, and they have not lost any magnetism. The coils had up to ten percent tolerance in DC resistance caused by the tolerance of the coilwire and by the difference in tension at the coilwinder. This will have no influence on the sound of the pickup. One thing all these good sounding pickups have in common is they all have less than four percent decay. Three to four percent is the expected amount of decay due to core loss of fully magnetized Alnico V magnets. Any additional decay is caused by minute shorts or even semi-shorts in the coil. These shorts are extremely hard to detect. However, in the past five years I have developed a measuring technique to detect these shorts. If a coil is perfect, the pickup will sound great. A thousand turns, more or less, have very little effect on output or sound. There is no difference between layer or scatter wound, hand or machine wound coils; or if you use enamel, formvar or modem polyurethane coated wire, as long as the coil is perfectly wound and free of Short. It is true that enamel or formvar coated wires are not as delicate as modem, thin polyurethane coaled wires and are not as likely to cause internal shorts.
Internal Shorts are on the loose!
Recently, I've measured more than a hundred so-called Vintage Pickups, and there was the Bull! The amount of decay varied between five and fifty percent. Only a few of these pickup came close to the real thing.
Getting back to magnetism, a few percent loss of magnetism in a pickup is totally irrelevant, but is crucial in an ammeter where the magnetical circuit must be calibrated 3Ild stabilized for correct measuring results. As long. as a pickup is in a guitar and does not get in direct Contact with high coercive magnets or be exposed to temperatures below -120 degrees Fahrenheit or above +800 degrees Fahrenheit, there is very little chance that the magnets will lose some of their magnetism. If you degauss an Alnico magnet in a pickup, the magnet will lose its permeability causing a decrease of inductance in the coil and an increase in decay due to core loss."
Can anyone describe the nature of this "decay" and its measurement in terms this non-techie hobbyist might be able to understand?
Thanks in advance.
"I have measured the magnets of numerous and beautifully sweet sounding vintage strat pickups, and they have not lost any magnetism. The coils had up to ten percent tolerance in DC resistance caused by the tolerance of the coilwire and by the difference in tension at the coilwinder. This will have no influence on the sound of the pickup. One thing all these good sounding pickups have in common is they all have less than four percent decay. Three to four percent is the expected amount of decay due to core loss of fully magnetized Alnico V magnets. Any additional decay is caused by minute shorts or even semi-shorts in the coil. These shorts are extremely hard to detect. However, in the past five years I have developed a measuring technique to detect these shorts. If a coil is perfect, the pickup will sound great. A thousand turns, more or less, have very little effect on output or sound. There is no difference between layer or scatter wound, hand or machine wound coils; or if you use enamel, formvar or modem polyurethane coated wire, as long as the coil is perfectly wound and free of Short. It is true that enamel or formvar coated wires are not as delicate as modem, thin polyurethane coaled wires and are not as likely to cause internal shorts.
Internal Shorts are on the loose!
Recently, I've measured more than a hundred so-called Vintage Pickups, and there was the Bull! The amount of decay varied between five and fifty percent. Only a few of these pickup came close to the real thing.
Getting back to magnetism, a few percent loss of magnetism in a pickup is totally irrelevant, but is crucial in an ammeter where the magnetical circuit must be calibrated 3Ild stabilized for correct measuring results. As long. as a pickup is in a guitar and does not get in direct Contact with high coercive magnets or be exposed to temperatures below -120 degrees Fahrenheit or above +800 degrees Fahrenheit, there is very little chance that the magnets will lose some of their magnetism. If you degauss an Alnico magnet in a pickup, the magnet will lose its permeability causing a decrease of inductance in the coil and an increase in decay due to core loss."
Can anyone describe the nature of this "decay" and its measurement in terms this non-techie hobbyist might be able to understand?
Thanks in advance.
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