How does a horseshoe actually work?
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- philipharris
- Member
- Posts: 364
- Joined: Mon May 10, 2004 9:16 am
How does a horseshoe actually work?
I'm no tech-head - I just play them, and I never really think about what's going on under the bonnet. But I got to wondering, as the original h/s is so idiosyncratic compared to other contemporary pups, how does it actually work? Are the poles magnetised as well the shoes? What role do the shoes play? Sorry to profess ignorance. I'm no good with cars or barbeques either, which is why I'm a trade mark lawyer, not a patent attorney I guess.
enough, already.
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jwr2
I believe the horseshoe pickup was the first pickup for the electric guitar ...
The shoes on the horseshoe pickup was magnetized steel ... this surrounded the strings with a magnetic field ... the problem is that steel is prone to degaussing ... modern pickups have alnico (aluminum, nickel, cobalt and iron) magnets in them or they have a base magnet with steel or iron pole pieces ...
as per trademarks I believe the shape of the horseshoe is a registered trademark that belongs to Rickenbacker ...
The shoes on the horseshoe pickup was magnetized steel ... this surrounded the strings with a magnetic field ... the problem is that steel is prone to degaussing ... modern pickups have alnico (aluminum, nickel, cobalt and iron) magnets in them or they have a base magnet with steel or iron pole pieces ...
as per trademarks I believe the shape of the horseshoe is a registered trademark that belongs to Rickenbacker ...
Magnetic pickups work by setting up a magnet field around a coil of wire. As the strings vibrate in the field they disturb the field slightly and induce a small current in the coil. The strength and shape of the field determines the strength of the resulting current. Horseshoe magnets setup a different field shape from that of a bar magnet. No, the poles on an old HS pickup are not magnetic. Only the shoes are.
- soundmasterg
- RRF Consultant
- Posts: 1923
- Joined: Tue Oct 01, 2002 1:06 pm
To add to Ted's excellent post the horseshoes sense string movement is all directions of vibration (up/down, side to side, etc.), whereas the magnetic pole type pickup is mainly in the horizontal (back and forth) direction. That is why the horseshoe pups are very good at reproducing the dynamics of playing also.
Yeah, different magnets in different orientations can produce different tone colors and dynamics. Permanent magnet technology was not very good in George Beachamps day. Pre-war magnets tend to be pretty weak. Not so much because they have degaussed but because they where not heavily gaussed to begin with. Compared with the industry today, he had a very limited field of choices. I don't know if George was able to use bar magnets or even if he had access to cylinder magnets. My guess is that fairly weak horseshoes made of tungsten alloy were his only real options.
- philipharris
- Member
- Posts: 364
- Joined: Mon May 10, 2004 9:16 am
