Reverse wound pickup
Moderator: jingle_jangle
Reverse wound pickup
Hi,
I've got a question: If I flip over the bridge pickup on my 4003, will it affect the sound at all?
The idea is to cancel the hum, at least when both pickups are turned on.
I've got a question: If I flip over the bridge pickup on my 4003, will it affect the sound at all?
The idea is to cancel the hum, at least when both pickups are turned on.
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dale_fortune
- Intermediate Member
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- Joined: Sat Oct 30, 2004 6:00 am
Different ways to do this to cancel hum. 1st teach your pickup the words so it doesn't have to hum along to the music. Now in all seriousness, reverse winding will give you an out-of-phase setting with both neck and bridge pickup on. By itself it will make no difference. You can add a dbl. pole dbl. throw switch witch does the same thing by reversing the phase. This is done by reversing the + and - leads of the pickup and isolating the ground wires from the metal pickup casings. Very simple but it doesn't always stop the humming. There are alot of variables that cause this problem. Electro magnetic fields generated by outside ground loops, electric lighting, airconditioning, and your guitar may have a faulty grd. wire from the strings/tail piece to the controls. Sheilding the pickups and wiring, if not already done works well. But if you are refering to turning your pickup end for end(fliping it over you'd have to remove the magnets and lead wires) no noticable difference will be heard.
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dale_fortune
- Intermediate Member
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- Joined: Sat Oct 30, 2004 6:00 am
- jingle_jangle
- RRF Moderator
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jwr2
Sergio can help you here ... He can make/modify pickups to be reverse wound ...
the basic priniciple is you reverse the magnet(s) and reverse the + - wires on one pickup ... usually the neck pickup ... then when both pickups are full on it will become a humbucker ... this will change the tone ... another way to do it is to put a reverse wound jazz pickup in the mute cavity and wire it into the neck pickup volume control and then when both volumes are at the same level it will be a humbucker ...
the basic priniciple is you reverse the magnet(s) and reverse the + - wires on one pickup ... usually the neck pickup ... then when both pickups are full on it will become a humbucker ... this will change the tone ... another way to do it is to put a reverse wound jazz pickup in the mute cavity and wire it into the neck pickup volume control and then when both volumes are at the same level it will be a humbucker ...
Any pickup is effectively "reverse wound" when you swap the wires. The key, as Jeff says, is reversing the magnet, too. On a Rick pickup, its as easy as flipping it. I've done this, and the tone didn't change much at all. Made the buzz go away, though.
Adding a jazz pickup can change the tone, also. To minimize this, remove the poles. They don't need to be there in order to eliminate the buzz.
Adding a jazz pickup can change the tone, also. To minimize this, remove the poles. They don't need to be there in order to eliminate the buzz.

