You are really firing today arn't you...BAD RONBO, KiLLeR DWaRfS wrote:your re-charging magnets look in better shape than the shoes...which are very corroded !!!
Emac.
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You are really firing today arn't you...BAD RONBO, KiLLeR DWaRfS wrote:your re-charging magnets look in better shape than the shoes...which are very corroded !!!
But the mystery remains: Why are the horseshoes on steel guitars apparently stable while those on basses are not?iiipopes wrote:Yes, unfortunately, the alloy of the original horseshoes is not magnetically stable...
My first ones, off a 1962 lapsteel, are in my 4003S bass and are holding the charge just fine. So I am not sure it is just what the shoes are in. The set (year of the shoes unknown) that doesn't hold a charge are mounted to the aluminum bass but no coil in the gap and sitting on a shelf.cjj wrote:But the mystery remains: Why are the horseshoes on steel guitars apparently stable while those on basses are not?iiipopes wrote:Yes, unfortunately, the alloy of the original horseshoes is not magnetically stable...
So, for anyone who has put an original HS pickup from a steel guitar into a bass, did it keep its magnetism, or lose it like an actual bass HS pickup?
That's actually not such a dumb idea. You can actually demagnetize things with an alternating magnetic field and there will be some frequency where this will be most effective, probably lower than higher frequencies.IvanMunoz wrote:This sounds dumb, but does the fact that maybe low frequency wavelengths comeing from the strings have any affect on it?
Have you read Atlas Shrugged?IvanMunoz wrote:This sounds dumb, but does the fact that maybe low frequency wavelengths comeing from the strings have any affect on it?
Maybe after decades of playing, those small vibrations would add up and decrease the magnetism? Just a thought?cjj wrote:That's actually not such a dumb idea. You can actually demagnetize things with an alternating magnetic field and there will be some frequency where this will be most effective, probably lower than higher frequencies.IvanMunoz wrote:This sounds dumb, but does the fact that maybe low frequency wavelengths comeing from the strings have any affect on it?
But, the range of frequencies where effective vs. non-effective comes into play is probably far larger than the audio spectrum.
And then, it generally takes a fairly large alternating field to demagnetize things, far larger than the tiny fluctuations present in a guitar string or the signals generated in the coil of the pickup.
But who knows? Without doing a bunch of experiments, it's all a guess and would depend on the actual characteristics of the materials involved...
You can you the same shoes for that, just not the same bobbins, right?cjj wrote:Well, since it's unlikely that we'll have a bunch of original horseshoe pickups around to experiment with, we may never know.
But, if we can get info from a number of people who have put the pickups from steel guitars into basses, we might learn something. If those pickups lose their magnetism over time while the same pickups that are in steels don't, then we can start to figure that somehow being in a bass causes more rapid degradation of the magnet's strength.
If the pickups transferred to basses don't lose their magnetism, then we might conclude there's some difference in the materials or construction between bass and steel guitar pickups...
The later 1¼" shoes yes, not the earlier 1½" shoes, unless you're Mark Walker.IvanMunoz wrote:You can you the same shoes for that, just not the same bobbins, right?cjj wrote:Well, since it's unlikely that we'll have a bunch of original horseshoe pickups around to experiment with, we may never know.
But, if we can get info from a number of people who have put the pickups from steel guitars into basses, we might learn something. If those pickups lose their magnetism over time while the same pickups that are in steels don't, then we can start to figure that somehow being in a bass causes more rapid degradation of the magnet's strength.
If the pickups transferred to basses don't lose their magnetism, then we might conclude there's some difference in the materials or construction between bass and steel guitar pickups...
You would think that would work, like the toasters (all have 6 poles)...but it doesn't.rickendelic wrote:Toasters have six poles, couldn't you use the whole thing?