Use the search funtion. There are many forum members that have recharged their own horse shoes. It would be worth putting this back to stock. Check with Sérgio Silva he may be able to help. You can find him here: viewforum.php?f=33&start=0Sprauge wrote:I took the HS out, it's barely magnetic enough to hold a bobby pin. Should it be stronger? Do you think a $400 RI pickup would be worth it in this bass, or is there a cheaper route? I'm starting to have second thoughts about this one.
60's Bass found, pickup original?
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
Re: 60's Bass found, pickup original?
"The best things in life aren't things."
Re: 60's Bass found, pickup original?
Thanks Woody Cross, I just purchased a pickup from Ric. I used to have one of these pickups in a Rickenbacher lap steel (I'm mainly a guitar player) and the sound was meatier than all my other lap slides. I never noticed that they were used on basses too! The original bass HS will stay in the case for the next owner to mess with.
Re: 60's Bass found, pickup original?
Not bad for magnetism, but you can improve it. Get a couple very strong magnets, and do like in this picture.Sprauge wrote:I took the HS out, it's barely magnetic enough to hold a bobby pin. Should it be stronger? Do you think a $400 RI pickup would be worth it in this bass, or is there a cheaper route? I'm starting to have second thoughts about this one.
Leave them on for a day. They will be stronger.
Re: 60's Bass found, pickup original?
I took the 70s pickup apart and now see how it screws (perfectly) in the 60s shoes. 70s magnet is shown in front of photo. I found a few places to have the shoes re-zapped into strong magnets, and the pickup rewound. Does 7.6k ish sound reasonable?


Re: 60's Bass found, pickup original?
I'd go more for 8 to 8.5 kohms' worth of wire to make sure the coil matches the magnets better.
- chefothefuture
- Advanced Member
- Posts: 1886
- Joined: Sun Oct 30, 2005 6:00 am
Re: 60's Bass found, pickup original?
Check this thread. There is quite the discussion regarding winding a bobbin. DC resistance, Inductance, wire size, have a lot to do with the tone....
viewtopic.php?f=2&t=404712
viewtopic.php?f=2&t=404712

