Yes suck'age decreases with wind'age. It's actually a good plan to set out winding a few (dozen) pickups ....just to get the hang of it, don't expect anything and each one you do you'll get better. Be like the old Nike slogan ..."Just Do It". Wind them up, document what you did, try them out, then cut the wire off the bobbin(s) and do it again.
Also good to get a testbed guitar even a cheap-ass pawn shop no-namer will do for your beginning experiments, you'll want to route-out the pickup areas through to the back so you can install/remove pickups w/o having to deal with the strings, way faster that way, you make a little removable mounting block that installs from the back that's what I did after a while got tired of the install/remove process.
When you first starting you need to get used to how everything effects everything and can worry about the wood later.
Definately get a spiral-bound notebook and get into the habit of writing EVERYTHING down (core size, turns-per-layer, wire size, tension, magnet type and gauss), get that habit going right from the start. Trust me, you'll refer to that notebook often in the comming years. When I started I had one notebook, then two, and now I have 3 of those 6"x9" 180-sheet 5-subject spiral notebooks, I refer to them constantly.
Wind different size bobbins so you get used to how the core size/shape effects things, and of course experiment with magnet types a gauss levels. You can live without an Extech but you should have a decent DMM and a gauss meter.
You will need to get the feel for tension, and find your best winding RPM for you and your machine (everybody's different).
If you don't have one, I'd recommend getting Jason's book, many here have started with that book.
Also good to get a testbed guitar even a cheap-ass pawn shop no-namer will do for your beginning experiments, you'll want to route-out the pickup areas through to the back so you can install/remove pickups w/o having to deal with the strings, way faster that way, you make a little removable mounting block that installs from the back that's what I did after a while got tired of the install/remove process.
When you first starting you need to get used to how everything effects everything and can worry about the wood later.
Definately get a spiral-bound notebook and get into the habit of writing EVERYTHING down (core size, turns-per-layer, wire size, tension, magnet type and gauss), get that habit going right from the start. Trust me, you'll refer to that notebook often in the comming years. When I started I had one notebook, then two, and now I have 3 of those 6"x9" 180-sheet 5-subject spiral notebooks, I refer to them constantly.
Wind different size bobbins so you get used to how the core size/shape effects things, and of course experiment with magnet types a gauss levels. You can live without an Extech but you should have a decent DMM and a gauss meter.
You will need to get the feel for tension, and find your best winding RPM for you and your machine (everybody's different).
If you don't have one, I'd recommend getting Jason's book, many here have started with that book.
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