Imagine you have a saddle and nut made of magnetic steel, and you have a stack of magnets connecting nut to bridge, say under the fretboard. So you've got a closed magnetic circuit, in that one pole of the stack of magnets goes thru the nut to the string, then along the string to the saddle then back into the other pole of the stack of magnets.
So if you put a coil around, say, the saddle, or the strings, or the stack of magnets, then what sort of a signal would you get?
And has it been done?
I'll try to test this out but first let's hear what the theory would predict. Would it pick up all the vibrations along the string, including those behind the fret being pressed, or only the vibrations close to the coil?
Obviously this would be unconventional, but not necessarily impractical to implement using thin neodymium cylinders (a stack under each string), if the results were worthwhile.
So if you put a coil around, say, the saddle, or the strings, or the stack of magnets, then what sort of a signal would you get?
And has it been done?
I'll try to test this out but first let's hear what the theory would predict. Would it pick up all the vibrations along the string, including those behind the fret being pressed, or only the vibrations close to the coil?
Obviously this would be unconventional, but not necessarily impractical to implement using thin neodymium cylinders (a stack under each string), if the results were worthwhile.
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