Gretsch "single coil" floating pickup

Doc B. · 8384

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Online Doc B.

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on: March 14, 2013, 06:13:04 PM
I bought one of these on eBay a while back. Price is totally right, less than $30. As usual I couldn't resist and took it apart to see what was inside.

It's not a single coil. It is a Johnny Smith style floating mini humbucker pickup, with two opposed coils, a ceramic magnet in the center of the covered coil, a metal base plate under both coils, and 4-40 thread pole screws in the coil that can be adjusted from the top.

In getting it apart I melted out a massive gob of wax. Wax potting is really about filling in the spaces in the coils to keep the wire from moving. There was plenty of wax left to do that job after I melted out bulk of the wax that was basically filling the entire pickup cover. Although it defies my understanding of physics, it seems that getting the excess wax out helped the dynamic response of the pup, just as I had read on the interweb.

I had previously gone in deep enough to find the connection between the two coils and pulled the leads so I could try both parallel and single coil operation. Neither was that great, so I wired it back into the standard series humbucker wiring configuration.

The only other mod I might want to try is replacing the ceramic magnet with Alnico. I have not been able to find an Alnico magnet of the right dimensions (about 1/8" thick and about 3/8" wide), so that may not happen

It's a very nice sounding jazz pickup for not much money. Like most Johnny Smith pups, it emphasizes the more airy acoustic personality of an archtop, rather than making the super fat mellow humbucker or Charlie Christian pup sound. But you can roll the treble down and get a pretty fat tone
 too. It's not a very high output pup, so you can run a Tode without much feedback and still get a nice clean jazz sound with the added harmonic warmth of low feedback.
« Last Edit: March 14, 2013, 06:24:57 PM by Doc B. »

Dan "Doc B." Schmalle
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Offline vladimirwolfe

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Reply #1 on: March 15, 2013, 08:26:22 AM
Doc,

Stop messin' around with the pickup and start practicing your Minor 7th b5 chords! Also your add #9's, 13th's, diminished...you get the point!  ;)

Looking forward to hearing the Tode with my jazz box in a week!

Doug



Online Doc B.

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Reply #2 on: March 15, 2013, 09:26:00 AM
While I'm nowhere near flying thru half diminished chord shapes, I am trying to put in an hour a day with the basics. Really basic scales in the morning before work, and trying to get down some real basic Freddie Green three note rhythm stuff and some simple blues strut lines in the evening. Heck in 10 or 20 years I might be able to get through a song.

Looking forward to next week too. PB is putting together a stock Tode for demo here at work, and I'll bring my own Tode in too. Think I will have the Weber Chicago Vintage  ceramic 8" in it, and maybe some Telefunken tubes.

Dan "Doc B." Schmalle
President For Life
Bottlehead Corp.


Offline vladimirwolfe

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Reply #3 on: March 16, 2013, 02:32:31 PM
Wow, an hour a day is pretty damn good for a working man!

Check out the blog "The Practice of Practice": http://intentionalpractice.wordpress.com/

Doug
« Last Edit: March 16, 2013, 02:35:39 PM by vladimirwolfe »