DIY Pickup Winder

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We're back! This week we embark on the long journey to learn how to make pickups from scratch, starting with the winder itself.

Пікірлер: 42

  • @edadpops1709
    @edadpops1709Ай бұрын

    Great Idea using a guitar knob to hold the disc on 👍👍

  • @bhartissimo
    @bhartissimo Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this video, especially how clear you were in spelling out the parts required and the steps you took to put the winder together. Very useful now that I'm considering building something similar.

  • @CraigsWorkshop
    @CraigsWorkshop Жыл бұрын

    This is brilliant - pickups (in particular from companies with the initials: S.D.) cost a fortune nowadays. It would be great to hear and see more about your pickup winding experiments.

  • @le_fancy_squid
    @le_fancy_squid Жыл бұрын

    Glad to see you back, I love your videos! This was a fun project and I'm looking forwards to see the pickups. Also I loved the new music!

  • @danwinter6665
    @danwinter6665 Жыл бұрын

    I have made my winding "machine" out of a fishing line coil winder. The winder has a 1:8 gear ratio and has a built-in mechanical counter. After I have winded some pickups, I developed a good routine winding them manually. It takes just about 5 minutes of a kind of a Zen work and it's done. Your high tech device is more the luxury version 😁 I really wonder how it will work. Very good video !

  • @notjonpeavey
    @notjonpeavey Жыл бұрын

    Fantastic! Can't wait to look at some more of your videos!

  • @GoingBuddha
    @GoingBuddha Жыл бұрын

    Great to hear your voice again. I was looking up doing this so I'm truly excited for this series.

  • @collincluff7955
    @collincluff79558 ай бұрын

    I figured out how to make pickups by taking one apart. They're really pretty simple. Consequently, I've been making my own for several years. Just recently designed and built a primitive winder that consists of two furniture leveling feet, a window crank, and two pieces of 1X2 lumber .

  • @VoyeurGuitars
    @VoyeurGuitars Жыл бұрын

    That's pretty cool. I've thought about winding pickups, but there's so much to learn.

  • @tuskedbeast
    @tuskedbeast Жыл бұрын

    Welcome back! Enjoyed this, looking forward to the series.

  • @zodak9999b
    @zodak9999b Жыл бұрын

    That winder went together nicely. I look forward to seeing it in action.

  • @mariaroncalli863
    @mariaroncalli863 Жыл бұрын

    Just to give you the measure of my ignorance, I had to Google what winding a pick up means, but in spite of that I just truly enjoy your videos so much! They are zen-like to me and they teach a lot about the satisfaction of building something from scratch, the step by step problem-solving, patience, perseverance, and all the good stuff us mental health counselors 'preach'!😅 And all accompanied by great music. Welcome back and I look forward to the videos to come!

  • @michaelplaysbass
    @michaelplaysbass Жыл бұрын

    Fantastic job, sir. This is rapidly becoming my favourite bass/guitar-related YT channel out there. Your ingenuity is fantastic, so I'm glad it's warmed up sufficiently in The Shire for you to get back to the projects :)

  • @oysteivi
    @oysteivi Жыл бұрын

    Awesome little machine!

  • @vinnyboombatz1399
    @vinnyboombatz1399Ай бұрын

    Awesome design! I have one observation/question: How do you ensure the pickup bobbin (the empty plastic shell that gets wound) is centered on your platter? Some designs I've seen, the platter has two alignment holes. The bobbins are 3d printed (that might be something cool to look into for future pickup builds) with corresponding posts on the bottom. The posts on the bottom of the bobbin line up with the holes on the platter. Double sided 3m tape keeps it affixed. When it's done winding they just clip/sand off the alignment pin on the bottom of the pickup. With regards to actually winding the pickups, there's a little bit of math involved, if I'm not mistaken. When winding pickups you want to hit a certain resistance. The thickness of the pickup wire, measurements of the bobbin, and how your winding (scatter vs tight, hand vs machine, etc) determines how many windings it takes to hit that resistance you need. The typical resistance range of a guitar pickup is 6k- 20k ohms. There are online calculators you can use, where you input the size of the bobbin, the thickness of the wire, your desired resistance, etc and it'll tell you how many windings you need. Some of the more advanced calculators let you pick the pickup type & position your building (ie: p90 vs humbucker vs telecaster vs neck vs bridge) But it basically breaks down like this: (I'll use fictitious numbers & measurements to explain, but the principle behind it still applies) If your target resistance is, lets say 7k ohms, 42awg wire might need 10,000 windings If your target resistance is, lets say 9k ohms, 42awg wire might need 12,000 windings. From the research I've read online, you'd need about a 10% difference in winding count to hear a noticeable change the tone. You can experiment with different wire gauges, different resistance targets, and different windings to dial in a certain tone. Most people dip the wound pickups in paraffin, to seal it off from moisture. I've heard it changes the sound slightly, but I'm too deaf to notice a difference LOL Great work! Looking forward to more videos!

  • @glennhynes5263
    @glennhynes5263 Жыл бұрын

    Beautiful job on the winder and a kicka$$ piano solo btw. Screws as polepieces and acrylic as flatwork has made me many a rick and fender pu. Love the channel. Fantastic musicianship. 👌

  • @fanbladeinstruments

    @fanbladeinstruments

    Жыл бұрын

    Haha, thank you🎹 I've done some experimental winds and found 1mm polycarbonate to make excellent flatwork, currently cutting pole pieces off a length of 6mm steel rod but that's no fun really, and as you say screws have made excelllent pole pieces for Rickenbacker and Dimarzio for decades. The experiments continue, gotta start filming tonight and show off my progress so far.

  • @davidgagnon2849
    @davidgagnon2849 Жыл бұрын

    I'm very impressed with your build on this! Going to look for your other videos showing it in action!

  • @davidgagnon2849

    @davidgagnon2849

    Жыл бұрын

    Well, I didn't find any. 😞

  • @fanbladeinstruments

    @fanbladeinstruments

    Жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/ZIyom8OLmJOqYc4.html

  • @mickcarr2744
    @mickcarr2744 Жыл бұрын

    Looks great! I use an old sewing machine from a junk shop, might have to upgrade now. Don't worry about breakages, they will happen but you can solder the broken ends back together if you have good eyes 😂

  • @fanbladeinstruments

    @fanbladeinstruments

    Жыл бұрын

    Initial tests prove that to be true. I've just made a stacked humbucker, 4 breakages, still got a reading of 8.2k at the end. This is actually way less stressful than I thought it was going to be, the next video is going to be hellafun😆

  • @mickcarr2744

    @mickcarr2744

    Жыл бұрын

    @@fanbladeinstruments great stuff! I found the hardest part was getting the right tension on the wire between my fingers.

  • @piotrkarel
    @piotrkarel Жыл бұрын

    Hey man. You haven't uploaded anything in a while. I hope you are doing well, and just have better things to do than entertaining us :) All the best, we miss you!

  • @fanbladeinstruments

    @fanbladeinstruments

    Жыл бұрын

    Ahh, yes. I've actually been trying to film a pickup making video, had 3 attempts not work out and I've realised there's a lot more to say than I can fit in one video and still have it be under an hour. So, a lot of wasted wire and a lot of time but I'm learning heaps and I've got some time off work for the holidays so expect a few videos over the next few weeks. Thanks😁

  • @piotrkarel

    @piotrkarel

    Жыл бұрын

    @@fanbladeinstruments glad to hear. I've been winding my own pickups on a cordless drill :) it's a lot of fun, and it's very satisfying when it works as you expected :)

  • @mkscustomcreations1061
    @mkscustomcreations1061Ай бұрын

    Any updates on how the winding experiment is going?

  • @wallystearns
    @wallystearns Жыл бұрын

    Your posts always make my day! Fantastic build, I'm excited to see what it's capable of! My only concern (and it may be unfounded) is that the outer polepieces in a pickup will trigger the counter mechanism, effectively double counting each rotation. I hope I'm wrong!

  • @fanbladeinstruments

    @fanbladeinstruments

    Жыл бұрын

    Indeed, I'm also worried about the neo in the disk affecting any alnico pole pieces that come near it. Might wind up with one string a bit louder than the others. We will see I suppose, thanks.

  • @nigelsmith3884

    @nigelsmith3884

    10 ай бұрын

    you may have already solved this. but if you buy your alnico pole pieces unmagnetised it’s should be fine. you can then north/south magnetise the pickup with a couple of rare earth magnets once the winding is done 😊

  • @attilasipeki1418
    @attilasipeki1418 Жыл бұрын

    Great video! Can you please share the list of the parts? Thank you in advance!

  • @jeffallen3382
    @jeffallen3382Ай бұрын

    You don't need to vacuum the air out when wax potting.

  • @6xcchamber971
    @6xcchamber971 Жыл бұрын

    What RPM is the motor rated at??? Good Video!!!! B

  • @fanbladeinstruments

    @fanbladeinstruments

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm not sure what the rating on the motor is but the gearbox is bringing it down to 800, having wound a few coils now I feel it could probably be faster without snapping the wire but then you get less control of the wind as it's happening. Thanks.

  • @glennhynes5263
    @glennhynes5263 Жыл бұрын

    Starting tomorrow, I m going to start using this as an insult: "Why don't you go suck the airbubbles out of a pickup?" The vagueness of the reference will be my delightful secret. 😊

  • @fanbladeinstruments

    @fanbladeinstruments

    Жыл бұрын

    That's magnificent😆 I can confirm the vacuum chamber does indeed pull a vacuum, it did some interesting things to a piece of bubblewrap but I've not had a pickup in there yet, all good things to come, cheers.

  • @joeking433
    @joeking4338 ай бұрын

    I don't get the clamp. Why not just used double stick tape like everyone else?

  • @fanbladeinstruments

    @fanbladeinstruments

    8 ай бұрын

    Ever had a half wound coil fly off the machine? Not me. Enjoy spending ages peeling off old tape residue? Not me either. Two problems solved, that's why the clamp.

  • @joeking433

    @joeking433

    8 ай бұрын

    @@fanbladeinstruments Your idea doesn't look too secure to me. And I've wound many pickups and never had one fall off using double stick tape. And the tape I use never leaves residue. Hope your clamp works over the long haul but I just don't see that happening.

  • @HomeTheatres
    @HomeTheatres Жыл бұрын

    but where is the demo.

  • @fanbladeinstruments

    @fanbladeinstruments

    Жыл бұрын

    It took me several attempts to get some viable pickups but here I am making a set, although you'll also need to check the last video in the series to hear it. Sorry but that's just how things worked out. kzread.info/dash/bejne/ZIyom8OLmJOqYc4.html

  • @renegade1283
    @renegade1283 Жыл бұрын

    Amazing! Well done. Now you mentioned having to learn about pickups - well I came across this youtube video you may have already seen. He explains everything it seems. Way above my head. kzread.info/dash/bejne/Z36B1bSRZratnNo.html. Now why is this of interest to me? Well, I have an Ibanez copy of the Gibson EB0 and the pickups no longer work and I need them rewound but I cannot find someone in Aus to do it. (Hint -Hint) Cheers from across the ditch.

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