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Making my own coil tappable Quarter Pounder.

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  • Making my own coil tappable Quarter Pounder.

    I have a Quarter Pounder which I'd like to coil tap, could I just take 2 wires, solder them both to the end of it's black lead and then use them both and get the same thing as I would if I ordered the pickup to be tapped from the factory?

  • #2
    Re: Making my own coil tappable Quarter Pounder.

    Unfortunately, its not quite that easy.

    A coil tap means, that at some point, while winding the pickup, they stop, connect a wire, and then continue with the rest of the winding.

    So, you end up with a "tap", or connection thats somewhere deep within the coil. In order to make your own, you'ld have to unwind a certain number of coils, attach a wire, (without causing any damage), and then rewinding whats left.

    A bit of a daunting task, but I think some have done it.

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    • #3
      Re: Making my own coil tappable Quarter Pounder.

      I think it can be done much easier on a humbucker...there should be a wire connecting one coil to the other, all you need to do is cut it in half and solder red and white wires to the two ends. I know nothing about the quarter pounder though, so I'm guessing it's not wired the same at the coils.

      Ryan
      Originally posted by JOLLY
      I'm the reason we had to sign waivers

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      • #4
        Re: Making my own coil tappable Quarter Pounder.

        Originally posted by rspst14
        I think it can be done much easier on a humbucker...there should be a wire connecting one coil to the other, all you need to do is cut it in half and solder red and white wires to the two ends. I know nothing about the quarter pounder though, so I'm guessing it's not wired the same at the coils.

        Ryan
        But thats coil-splitting. Which is different than coil-tapping.

        Here's the text from Duncans FAQ:

        What is a coil tap?
        A coil tap refers to a lead connected to an individual coil’s winding and is used to raise and lower a pickup’s output and change its tone. This is most often utilized on single coil pickups where the player wants a higher output pickup but also wants to be able to switch to a lower output and more vintage-type tone using the same pickup. Many of our pickups for Strat® and Tele® are available in tapped versions for an additional $1 - $11, depending on the model. In addition,you can special order a "Shop Floor Custom" tapped version of any other pickup for an upcharge of $12.

        What is coil splitting?
        Coil splitting refers to the ability to disable one coil in a humbucker-type pickup. This offers the player option of getting a single coil-type tone from a humbucker-loaded guitar. Many pickups have three- or four-conductor wiring that allows for one coil to be disabled by shorting one coil to either ground or hot. All production Seymour Duncan humbuckers can be purchased with four-conductor wiring either stock from the factory or as a Production Floor Custom order. The exceptions to this rule are the Vintage Rails (SVR-1) and Duckbuckers (SDBR-1), which are wired internally in parallel from the factory.

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        • #5
          Re: Making my own coil tappable Quarter Pounder.

          Ah, right...I always get those two confused.

          Ryan
          Originally posted by JOLLY
          I'm the reason we had to sign waivers

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          • #6
            Re: Making my own coil tappable Quarter Pounder.

            Hmm, I've got an old Ibanez single coil lying around, I'll see how tough it is unwinding it. Do I have to make sure to leave the original wire connected, or do I reconnect that once I'm done rewinding?

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            • #7
              Re: Making my own coil tappable Quarter Pounder.

              Originally posted by ArtieToo
              But thats coil-splitting. Which is different than coil-tapping.

              Here's the text from Duncans FAQ:
              I hate this! A *tap* is both, as that's literally what it is (think transformers). SD just uses two different terms to avoid confusion ... one for tapping one coil (turning it off) ... a *split*; and one for tapping within a coil (turning part of that coil off). Too me it adds confusion when I have to refer to tapping a pup, because I never know what the other guy is actually referring too, and whether he's going to misinterpret what I'm talking about. A coil tap is a coil tap, whether you are tapping between two coils or within one coil.
              ::::To sound reinforcement engineer::::
              ... What? ... ::::snicker:::: ...Yes, ... Right, ...
              Could we please have everything louder than everything else ? ...

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