-
Originally Posted by sgosnell
-
11-02-2024 04:48 PM
-
A very small pilot hole is sufficient for screws that mount a pickup to a neck. I have no idea about whatever your carpenter made or used to make it. I've never needed self-tapping screws for woodworking, certainly not for small screws into guitars. YMMV.
-
Originally Posted by sgosnell
-
-
Originally Posted by nbevan3
There seems to be some confusion on the web. Some who refer to 12 adjustable poles, are actually referring to Carvin's *11* adjustable poles *per coil*. NOT 6 adjustable poles on each coil.
-
Originally Posted by Woody Sound
-
Originally Posted by sgosnell
-
Originally Posted by sgosnell
But about the 12 pole, I will say that adjusting both coils gives a better string to string balance than just the six in all the other floaters I have used. So I would say that the design had a big impact for me. I really don't know why floaters are harder to balance than set in pickups, but it seems that they are.
Also, in theory you should be able to adjust the coils separately, perhaps one lower than the other, which could affect the tone. Unbalanced coils have been found in some vintage PAF's, and are a feature of some boutique PAF designs. YMMV etc.
-
I don't say that having 12 poles doesn't affect the tone to some degree, just not enough to be economically viable for large pickup manufacturers, nor even for most smaller manufacturers. If it sold more pickups for more money, they would be ubiquitous. They are not.
-
Originally Posted by RJVB
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
-
Originally Posted by sgosnell
I can't remember the exact numbers but if the manufacturer has to add even a 10 cent screw for a feature that added cost can appear in the MSRP multiplied by a healthy factor. An uncle of mine working for Philips TV division explained that once already back in the 80s, when I asked why PCBs so often have empty locations labelled for additional functions.
Originally Posted by ThatRhythmMan
-
The purpose of having 12 adjustable pole pieces on the Kent Armstrong PAF design is so that the pickup can be readily adjusted for use with steel, nickel, nickel plated, bronze/brass wound, strings, etc. If you can only adjust one coil's pole pieces, you're going to have a hard time having that range of adjustment for different string materials.
As for why most other pickup makers don't do that, I suspect the explanation given above is pretty accurate.
-
Maybe a stupid question, but does a 6-screw design necessarily correspond to having only 6 adjustable poles or would it be possible to couple the 2 poles reading a single string?
-
Perhaps it could be done, but increased complexity + increased cost != increased profit, nor necessarily increased utility.
-
Originally Posted by Cunamara
-
I used some J-B Weld Epoxy resin last week to attach a humbucker with no tab to a pickguard, seems to be ok, but time will see.
-
JB Weld is good stuff. I once used it to repair the exhaust manifold on a POS GM car, and it held fine. Just be advised that you cannot remove the pickup without damaging it or the pickguard, or both.
-
An interesting Teisco Style Gold Foil 10.7mm very thin pickup that could possibly be made into a floating pickup. (Are these Teisco Style Gold Foil a new pickup fad?)
Vintage Teisco Style Gold Foil Guitar Pickup / Alnico 5 – Roswell Pickups
Last edited by GuyBoden; 11-16-2024 at 01:21 PM.
-
One the inadvertent effects of having only six adjustable screws on a PAF style pickup is that some people believe only one coil of the pickup contributes to the tone. The amp gets signal from both coils as most of us here will already know. That's going to be much more obvious with 12 pole pieces that you can adjust.
-
-
-
-
-
Eastman AR371 [Australia]
Today, 12:25 AM in For Sale