Originally posted by chad h
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But, everyone like something. So you might love that pickup, and I might not. Also, 10,000 turns with 44 sounds very different from that many turns of something heavier. 42 gauge would be really bassy. I had a guy that wanted a dark sounding bridge pickup on a P bass. So I made a dual J looking pickup, and wound it like two regular J coils. He loved it. For his Yamaha six string bass, he wanted something even darker. I did 10,000 turns of 44 on each coil. At first he liked it, but then said he needed more top end, and they were sensitive to noise. Now guitarist don't use such hi-fi pickups or amps, but it demonstrated the lack of top end when used with a clean bass amp.
Honestly, the whole exercise was simply an experiment to see how I could get 25k ohm on a humbucker, because (like it or not) I know that some people WANT pickups with ridiculously high DCR. I totally expected it to sound awful. I even came up with a name for it - the Super High Impedance Transducer - as I thought the acronym would accurately describe the sound. But I was shocked at how good the thing sounded. Now, you and I might have different interpretations of what "muddy" means, but that would be about the last adjective I'd use to describe the sound. I don't notice excessive low frequencies, but it's certainly full in the mids. And it's as clear and focused as any pickup I've ever heard. There is absolutely no question that this thing will "cut through the mix." If anybody asks me to wind a 25k ohm humbucker, I will not hesitate to put 10,000 turns of 44 awg wire on each coil. And I won't be worried about having embarrassed myself.
So try to make an efficient pickup. That can be louder at lower winds than other designs. Bill Lawrence avoided eddy currents but eliminating metal parts, with the exception of the blades, on his pickups. He ended up with powerful, but very bright pickups. And there are other shades of tone/power between the two designs. DiMarzio uses eddy currents as a tone shaping device, by having a thin sheet of brass on top of the coils on their Model One bass pickup. They also manipulate inductance with metal slugs on some of their guitar pickups.
So try different ideas, and don't worry about what they did 50 years ago. You might discover something new.
I totally agree that the sort of pickups I make should (and will) be motivated by tone, and that the magic formulas will only be determined by experimentation. But rather than ignore numbers like DC resistance, I think it's more useful to learn what that DCR actually means. By itself, it obviously doesn't communicate very much about the tone of the pickup. But paired with information about the gauge of the wire or the number of turns or the inductance of the coil, I think it probably tells us quite a lot. For example, almost everybody would guess that a 30k ohms worth of 42 awg would sound muddy. And apparently this is true. It also leads many to believe that 25k ohms worth of 44awg would sound muddy. I disagree with that. So, what this experiment does for me is to help me flesh out the sorts of tradeoff I make when changing parameters of my pickups.
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