First post on the forum (though I've lurked for a while), and here's my first pickup wind. It's a humbucker sized P90 using a parts kit I found on Reverb, which was shipped from the UK. I picked this for 2 reasons - it fits an SG I have that has an open pickup cavity, and since it's a single coil I figured it would be easier to start with than a humbucker. And I'm winding with 38AWG to avoid breaking the wire. My goal is to do enough practice on simpler pickups to eventually move on to more complicated ones.
First, here's my setup: one of those NZ-1 manual coil winders, mounted to a piece of 2x8 with cork feet so it doesn't move around. I cut a block of wood, drilled it, then pounded in a coupling nut and spread some super glue around the joint. This is then threaded onto the shaft of the NZ-1 and the lock nut tightened up against it. That's the mounting surface for my bobbin, which I mounted with double sided scotch tape.
I guided the wire by hand, which I think was the cause of the lopsidedness of the coil. I may need to build an adjustable guide to go on here so I don't jump the sides of the bobbin.
I think it looks pretty good from this angle!
But here you can see that it didn't build evenly
I managed to get 1578.5 turns of 38AWG wire on it before the tape popped off and sent the pickup flying (next step: stronger tape). I don't have my multimeter so I wasn't able to check for continuity, but I think I may unwind this one and start over to get it right in any event. I've always liked the sound of low-wind pickups, so I was planning to try and get 3000 or so turns on here.
I had a lot of fun doing this! And I think it will only get better once I've developed more skill. The manual winder wasn't as tiring as I thought it would be, and it really didn't take long to get this far. It does 8 turns of the shaft for each turn of the crank, so it moves along at a pretty good pace. Does anybody have any tips for me or see anything really obviously wrong that I'm doing?
First, here's my setup: one of those NZ-1 manual coil winders, mounted to a piece of 2x8 with cork feet so it doesn't move around. I cut a block of wood, drilled it, then pounded in a coupling nut and spread some super glue around the joint. This is then threaded onto the shaft of the NZ-1 and the lock nut tightened up against it. That's the mounting surface for my bobbin, which I mounted with double sided scotch tape.
I guided the wire by hand, which I think was the cause of the lopsidedness of the coil. I may need to build an adjustable guide to go on here so I don't jump the sides of the bobbin.
I think it looks pretty good from this angle!
But here you can see that it didn't build evenly
I managed to get 1578.5 turns of 38AWG wire on it before the tape popped off and sent the pickup flying (next step: stronger tape). I don't have my multimeter so I wasn't able to check for continuity, but I think I may unwind this one and start over to get it right in any event. I've always liked the sound of low-wind pickups, so I was planning to try and get 3000 or so turns on here.
I had a lot of fun doing this! And I think it will only get better once I've developed more skill. The manual winder wasn't as tiring as I thought it would be, and it really didn't take long to get this far. It does 8 turns of the shaft for each turn of the crank, so it moves along at a pretty good pace. Does anybody have any tips for me or see anything really obviously wrong that I'm doing?
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