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Folks -
Any good ideas on how to pot a pickup quickly and firmly? Can’t wax pot these; bobbins have glue joints that will give up with heat. Ultra-thin CA seems like it would get hot enough to melt wire insulation.
Does lacquer work? Never actually used it. If so, is there a good formulation grabbable at a hardware store?
Other ideas?
Bob Palmieri
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Are they homemade? ... What specific glue did you use? ... did you use hobby/craft specs hot glue?bobbins have glue joints that will give up with heat.
Please post a couple bobbin pictures showing joints/assembly.
Juan Manuel Fahey
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Thanks Juan! Joints aren’t visible; covered by windings. I used Master Glue Thin Cyanoacrylate for bonding circuit board to rubber flexmag
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I've heard of shellac being used but can't verify the results.
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I'd be wary of using anything that requires evaporation to harden. Think about it... Once it skins over it acts like it's own container keeping air replenishment and circulation away from the still wet product inside. Maybe there's a thin catalyzed product you could use.
"In fact when I run into problems working on electronic circuirts, there are so many times that when I finally track it down, the source of the problem is located between my soldering iron and my seat." SoulFetish
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"Being born on third base and thinking that you must have hit a triple is pure delusion!" Steve A
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That^^.I'd be wary of using anything that requires evaporation to harden.
And the aggressive solvents used especially with lacquer may melt the wire insulation and cause shorts.
Pure paraffin melts below 60°C and thus allows for a relatively low potting temperature. I don't think there needs to be a risk for cyanoacrylate glue joints.
What's your information about related reaction temperatures?Ultra-thin CA seems like it would get hot enough to melt wire insulation.
Last edited by Helmholtz; 05-29-2019 at 06:38 PM.
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I wax pot pickups all the time that is superglued together with never any problem .
"UP here in the Canada we shoot things we don't understand"
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CA glue is one of the higher temp glues available to us so as long as you keep your wax below it's open air combustion temp you won't have any problems.
That said if you want to avoid the heat altogether then use a penetrating epoxy formula which seems to work perfectly for potting pickups. Epoxies.com sells many different potting epoxies that would also work well. Most conventional epoxies have superb penetrating capabilities as long as they are slower setting types. 5 minute epoxy is not what you want here.
Last edited by David King; 05-29-2019 at 07:31 PM.
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I agree with Copper and DK, you can wax pot super glue pickups.
I've made lots of pickups with bobbins glued to home brew baseplates.
I wax pot all of them.
Keep your wax temp 150F or less, and you should have no problems.
T
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Terry
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Fender lacquer potted pickups, I've dipped them in poly.
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AFAIK, Fender did that in a period after ca. 1968. But it seems that those PUs showed increased (later) failures.Fender lacquer potted pickups
Last edited by Helmholtz; 05-29-2019 at 08:30 PM.
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Job security, he said it was a emergency.
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"In fact when I run into problems working on electronic circuirts, there are so many times that when I finally track it down, the source of the problem is located between my soldering iron and my seat." SoulFetish
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"Being born on third base and thinking that you must have hit a triple is pure delusion!" Steve A
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I didn't know that. But I have to wonder if the magnet wire insulation wasn't different from what's used today. Lacquer thinner is pretty hot (fast, aromatic, strong) stuff. I'd be more worried about lacquer than I would CA glue actually.
The thing about thin catalyzed products is that you can't just let them sit there until you think they've penetrated enough. You're on the clock. Wait too long and you get a pickup inside a plastic brickSomething I did once was to use a brake bleed pump (the little hand vacuum pump they sell at the auto parts store) siliconed into a hole in a mayonnaise jar lid. I put the catalyzed varnish (cabinet finish from a job I did actually) into the jar with the pickup, screwed the lid on and started squeezing the pump. You could watch the air evacuate the pickup in tiny bubbles. The action was very obviously accelerated with increased vacuum.
Even then I noticed the catalyzed varnish smell on that guitar for almost a year. If you leave a can of this catalyzed "finish" product unused it doesn't really completely harden in thicker applications for a long time. So there must be some evaporation aspect as well. But that guitar worked great without squealies until the day I sold it.
"In fact when I run into problems working on electronic circuirts, there are so many times that when I finally track it down, the source of the problem is located between my soldering iron and my seat." SoulFetish
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"Being born on third base and thinking that you must have hit a triple is pure delusion!" Steve A
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Old style wire enamel was strong, quite chemical resistant and you had to burn it first, then scratch/sand it away, go figure.
I deplore modern reliance on sissy snowflake "self soldering" enamel, which evaporates leaving behind shiny copper perfect for soldering but is atoms thick and resists no solvents (except, maybe, alcohol or mineral spirits and not too sure about the second) and statistically what´s most probably in your pickup, but you can safely use paraffin wax which melts around 68C so a tin floating in hot water is fine, just leave pickup inside long enough (1 hour?) so its deepest core reaches melting temperature.
I much prefer wax potting to anything else because when wax cools, it "pulls" very little and in any case is way softer than anything else there.
Juan Manuel Fahey
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Use a pot of hot water on the stove top. Put a couple of 1/4" wooden shims in the pan. Then put another pot on the wooden shims big enough to hold the pickup, the wax and maybe something heavy enough to keep it from wanting to float. That should work fine.
My wax potting rig is a repurposed coffee maker with a wide mouth carafe and a burner modification. The wife still has leftover blocks of paraffin from a candle making phaseI stick a standard kitchen thermometer into the wax to monitor temperature.
Last edited by Chuck H; 05-30-2019 at 05:00 PM.
"In fact when I run into problems working on electronic circuirts, there are so many times that when I finally track it down, the source of the problem is located between my soldering iron and my seat." SoulFetish
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"Being born on third base and thinking that you must have hit a triple is pure delusion!" Steve A
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Thanks. I have always been a researcher with a special interest in vintage stuff.
While my own '68 strat PUs are obviously wax potted (I can scratch off some wax with my fingernail), lacquer potting in later strat PUs was confirmed by people who do a lot of rewinds, see e.g. https://music-electronics-forum.com/...l=1#post449209 . There are also other interesting threads on this topic on the MEF.
Here is an original Fender factory spec. for Tele lead PUs dated '65/'67 (from A.R. Duchossoir's book "The Fender Telecaster"):
Seems they used lacquer to stabilize the magnets-flatwork assy before winding.
BTW, I would think that plain enamel is more susceptible to melting by lacquer thinners than formvar because its formula is oil-based. Testing by submerging a piece of wire in a jar with thinner would be easy and essential.
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"In fact when I run into problems working on electronic circuirts, there are so many times that when I finally track it down, the source of the problem is located between my soldering iron and my seat." SoulFetish
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"Being born on third base and thinking that you must have hit a triple is pure delusion!" Steve A
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In one of the older MEF threads/discussions on PU potting I found this interesting patent of Leo Fender:
Fender - Wax Potting pat4885970.pdf
His rationale is/was preventing moisture from penetrating the winding(s) and changing the tone. Strangely it was filed as late as 1987, even though Fender PUs were wax potted at least since the 50s.
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Fender dipped armatures prior to winding them in lacquer in an attempt to insulate the magnets and prevent the wire from shorting to them. It was not very reliable. When I rewound a 63 Jazz bass neck PU there was a layer of masking tape around the magnets. They were lightly wax potted, definitely not full penetration.
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I don't think Leo ever assumed, even as it was happening with the gear he designed, that anyone would have problems with microphony due to acoustic feedback. The concept was outside of his understanding. Why the hell would anyone turn up an amp until it distorted everything???
"In fact when I run into problems working on electronic circuirts, there are so many times that when I finally track it down, the source of the problem is located between my soldering iron and my seat." SoulFetish
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"Being born on third base and thinking that you must have hit a triple is pure delusion!" Steve A
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Folks -
Sorry to have been absent through all this activity. It seems that I get email notifications of activity for a day or two and then they stop, even though the activity continues.
This particular coil is formed from American Formvar wire from maybe 1982. I did some experiments with coils of similar constitution, squirting ultra-thin Flu-Boost CA into the coils while watching my faithful Fluke ohmmeter. Small rise in resistance with heat, but when it all hardened (hours later without accelerator) the resistance was just where it started before the gluesquirt. Coil seems quite solid and resistant to translating physical shock into signal. Another experiment using accelerator was similarly benign to the insulation but seemed to stop penetration too early. An appointment with a vacuum oven next week could prove to have some significant results; if so I'll be back.
Bob Palmieri
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Bob;
I've been potting all of my pickups with a special super-thin epoxy called CPES (Clear Penetrating Epoxy Sealant), made by Smith & Co. It's a two-part epoxy, with a viscosity about like alcohol. It's made for sealing up old rotted timbers in wood reconstruction. It works beautifully for potting pickup coils. It soaks thoroughly down through the coil and cures. But it always stays a little rubbery; not brittle hard. It doesn't heat up at all, that I can tell, while curing. Doesn't harm the insulation on the wire. I lightly brush it onto the outside of the coil, and keep adding more until I can see that it's fully saturated. It cures in 4-6 hours.
I like it better than wax for potting coils. I've cut some coils apart, and it fully saturates and glues all the wire together. Forever; you're not going to unwind it. But you can cut the potted wire off a bobbin, if necessary. The biggest downside is that it stinks; powerful fumes while mixing and curing. You need ventilation while working with it.
I've been potting all my pickups with it since about 2005. Never had a pickup failure out in the field; never had any lab failures due to potting.
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Brilliant product suggestionOf course, it can't be as thin as alcohol because it MUST have some solids in it to work and alcohol is LESS than water thin. But I get your point. It's thin enough that it doesn't impede the process of saturation. As a sealer I might have been suspicious of it effectively catalyzing in a penetrative situation (based on my own experience). But having a first hand account gives me A LOT more confidence. Thank you.
"In fact when I run into problems working on electronic circuirts, there are so many times that when I finally track it down, the source of the problem is located between my soldering iron and my seat." SoulFetish
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"Being born on third base and thinking that you must have hit a triple is pure delusion!" Steve A
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I haven't seen an actual specification of the viscosity of CPES, but it's somewhere between alcohol and water, about like the super-thin CA glue. It definitely fully saturates tightly wound wire coils without any voids. I've cut coils apart and looked at them. As I said above, it stays a bit rubbery after curing. If you cut the coil with a knife, you can peel the bundle of wire back. It's still bendable, not rock hard. I like that as a characteristic for potting material. That tells me it's cushioning the wire a bit against vibration and thermal expansion.
As compared to wax, the advantages are:
It's a permanent cure, tougher material, never going to be affected by moisture or temperature. Should never dry out or crack over time.
Very simple neat application by daubing. No need to dunk it (although you could if you want to); no real cleanup needed afterwards.
No need for vacuum or temperature control. It soaks in completely and cures by itself.
No heat rise during the potting; no temperature damage to parts or connections or wire insulation.
Disadvantages:
It's a slower process than wax. Only a few minutes to daub it on, but then it needs 4-6 hours to cure.
It is permanent; you're not going to melt it off and unwind the wire.
It stinks. A strong odor from its solvent. Application and drying needs to be done in good ventilation. After it's fully cured, the smell is gone. That's how you tell it's cured.
CPES isn't cheap: $48 for 2-pint kit on Amazon. But 2 pints will probably do hundreds of pickups.
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Would be interesting to know the material's dielectric constant and electrical conductivity, in other words its potential influence on PU characteristics. Paraffin has excellent properties but does somewhat increase self-capacitance.
Last edited by Helmholtz; 06-13-2019 at 04:28 PM.
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I haven't been able to measure any change in resistance, capacitance, or overall sound between unpotted and potted. It's plastic, filling the space between the wires.
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And it's the material in the space between the wires which increases capacitance (compared to air). The dielectric constant determines how much the potting material increases the capacitance of air gaps. Plastics typically have a dielectric constant between 3 and 8 (some epoxies). Paraffin is around 2.It's plastic, filling the space between the wires.
But as long as the total resulting self-capacitance is low compared to the capacitance of the guitar cable, there won't be much effect on PU sound.
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Bruce!
Wow... thanks for this - didn't know from this product at all.
By the way, the Glu-Boost Ultra Thin CA ended up working surprisingly well in the hour of my urgent need. All measurements remained in spec, no heat issues (without the dreaded accelerator) and my super-high-end guitar builder client is happy.
However, I'm definitely gonna try the CPES.
Bob Palmieri
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