So, after much trial and error with varying types of voltage/ohm-meters, I have finally figured out how to check pickup resistance. Thing is, I'm as confused as ever as by my results, which are as follows:
'67 330 (toasters) - in the 7.2-7.4 range, as expected.
HB-1 - pretty hot, 14 something.
'90s 360/12 (hi-gains) - 10.2 per pickup.
'89 330 (hi-gains) - this is the weird one - neck p/u was 12.2 or something, the bridge was 7.7! Yet it sounds so much louder than the '67. What gives?
THEN I checked a pair of '80s toasters I had lying around...and they're a solid 12.2 !!! (At least they're disconnected, so if I chose to have them scattered I could with ease...but still, they're hotter than the ones on the 360/12, and that's where they were headed!)
Anyhoo folks, you never know what you'll find or why things sound they way they do.
Questions/comments?
Pickup Impedance Madness Revisited
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
Recently I rewound two 4001 neck high-gains and one 4001 bridge high-gain, all of which were from the mid 70's. I used the very same wire on each one of them. (Rust on the polepieces had broken down wire insulation & continuity.)
Bridge p.u.: 6.6
Neck p.u. one: 8.2
Neck p.u. two: 5.4 (!)
Yeah, what gives?
Bridge p.u.: 6.6
Neck p.u. one: 8.2
Neck p.u. two: 5.4 (!)
Yeah, what gives?
A Rickenbacker bass is much like the Jaguar E car - perennially ultra-fashionable.
- kennyhowes
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- kennyhowes
- Veteran RRF member
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