Pickups on 1973 Emmons Push Pull
Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
- Chuck Hamilton
- Posts: 80
- Joined: 29 Aug 2016 7:41 am
- Location: Flower Mound, Texas, USA
Pickups on 1973 Emmons Push Pull
The pick up on the E9 neck of my 1976 Emmons push pull has gone microphonic. It appears to be the original single coil pick up. I would like to replace it with something that will keep that great Emmons sound. My friend Henry Matthews said a single coil pick up at about 16.5 ohms might be good but other than that I don’t know where to start to decide what to buy or where to buy it. I’d appreciate any thoughts y’all might have. Thanks!
Too much crap to list and who really cares anyway??
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- Bob Hoffnar
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- Jason Putnam
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- Bob Hoffnar
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Clay builds the new Emmons pickups ! So there you have it.
I have had pickups made by Scott at
https://www.steeltronics.com/
he does a great job.
Also Nick at
http://fryerguitarpickups.com/
is now offering wide mount pickups for Emmons steels. He makes pickups for Sho Pro.
I have had pickups made by Scott at
https://www.steeltronics.com/
he does a great job.
Also Nick at
http://fryerguitarpickups.com/
is now offering wide mount pickups for Emmons steels. He makes pickups for Sho Pro.
Bob
- Chuck Hamilton
- Posts: 80
- Joined: 29 Aug 2016 7:41 am
- Location: Flower Mound, Texas, USA
Thank you for your suggestions!
What does it mean to "wax" the windings and how does one go about doing it?
Also, what does potting the pickup mean?
I would like to keep the original pickups if possible but will also look into the new ones you recommended.
Thanks to all of you for sharing your knowledge!
What does it mean to "wax" the windings and how does one go about doing it?
Also, what does potting the pickup mean?
I would like to keep the original pickups if possible but will also look into the new ones you recommended.
Thanks to all of you for sharing your knowledge!
Too much crap to list and who really cares anyway??
- Dave Campbell
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Chuck, Dave’s explanation is essentially correct. But completely submerging isn’t necessary. Carefully remove the covering around the windings and use a candle to drip melted wax onto the wound wire. The wax will quickly solidify and stop any loose windings from moving, which is what’s causing the microphonic noise you’re hearing. A loose winding will pickup and amplify any vibrations. Carefully use a quality electrical tape to recover the windings after the wax dries completely and you should be good to go.
Dave
Dave
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It's amazing how much info one can find on YouTube!
I've never done this so I can't recommend any of these videos, but perhaps someone who has re-waxed a guitar pickup can comment on these three examples...
How To Wax Pot A Guitar Pickup At Home
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t60NN13Grf0
How To Wax Pot Guitar Pickups
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lE0pZ4_jxO0
Guitar Pickup Potting - How To - DIY - Eliminate Microphonics & Squealing - Easy Effective -wax
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rFEyQaMflcI
- Dave
I've never done this so I can't recommend any of these videos, but perhaps someone who has re-waxed a guitar pickup can comment on these three examples...
How To Wax Pot A Guitar Pickup At Home
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t60NN13Grf0
How To Wax Pot Guitar Pickups
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lE0pZ4_jxO0
Guitar Pickup Potting - How To - DIY - Eliminate Microphonics & Squealing - Easy Effective -wax
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rFEyQaMflcI
- Dave