A few months ago we were talking about measuring the capacitance of pickups with LCR meters set to 100kHz, in Cp mode. A problem at the time was that the DE-5000, the most affordable full-featured LCR meter available, only has a high test frequency of 100kHz, and it's very possible for the guitar pickup to be anomalously inductive around 100kHz, because coils are imperfect in how they're wound. When that happens, the Cp measurement for capacitance at 100kHz gives a bogus result. But I've come across another meter that's also affordable, the Hantek 1833C LCR , selling for less than $180 on Amazon https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0...?ie=UTF8&psc=1 and it appears to be even cheaper from some other vendors, which has all the usual features of a good LCR meter, but has several more high frequency test points: 40kHz, 50kHz, 75kHz, and 100kHz, and with the total of 4 data points past the self-resonance of the pickup, anomalies in the coil can be spotted and discarded, giving the true capacitance of the pickup. The capacitance of most pickups is small enough that it doesn't have a big impact on the end result, but if you want to know the capacitance for it's own sake, this will reveal the value with a good degree of certainty.
It's a real nice piece of hardware, having a backlit screen, fast update rate, USB chargeable internal battery. If you're into pickup analysis, this is a good LCR meter to have on hand.
It's a real nice piece of hardware, having a backlit screen, fast update rate, USB chargeable internal battery. If you're into pickup analysis, this is a good LCR meter to have on hand.
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