1000k and 750K pickup resistance

Quiiiinten

New member
Hello all,

My new summer hobby is pickup winding, or at least, I'm hoping it to be. I've made a manual pickup winder using one of those reels youd use on a fishing rod and I've made three pups so far. The first one, 1000 turns or so, was a test pup. It worked, not a lot of volume but it works. I made a second pup, still severely underwound, but there was no sound. I figured I must've f***ed up, so I made a third one. All three of them single coil with Alnico V. Number 3 also did not produce any sound.

So I checked the guitar, the circuit was fine and when I plugged number 1 in again it there was nothing wrong. So I measured the DC resistance, you know, to check. Guess what?

1: 45K (works, low volume, but still sweet-ish)
2: 750K (no sound)
3: 980K (no sound)

Yes, you are reading this correctly. Those numbers are of the charts! So I checked a real, working humbucker: the usual 8.8K. Also, these measurements were done outside of the guitar, no accidental half open volume pots or something.

How can these numbers be so high? Moreover, how can number 1 work, yet still have this insane resistance? All are wound using 42 AWG and all are fairly underwound. Now I know my solder jobs aren't great, but I dont think that should cause such big problems, right?

Does anyone have any ideas and/or suggestions?

Thanks in Advance
 
Re: 1000k and 750K pickup resistance

Can't happen.

Your multimeter set to the right scale? If the readings are correct, you have so much wire on the pup it would have to be 10 inches wide to hold 750k, even 45k!
 
Re: 1000k and 750K pickup resistance

I know it sounds impossible, but I ensure you it's what I'm seeing. Here is the reading of a working Humbucker in my Gretsch. Note I've selected the 20K range:
20190618_134345.jpg20190618_134345.jpg
Here is the reading from my pickup, the range of 2000K selected:
20190618_134533.jpg
20190618_134533.jpg

If I select the 20k or 200k range with this pickup, it reads 1.

Thanks!
 
Re: 1000k and 750K pickup resistance

numbers like these often indicate an issue within the coil. I.e.: a short.
 
Re: 1000k and 750K pickup resistance

But if there is a short, there shouldn't be any sound. Right? Because the 45K pup sounded fine, just a bit weak because it had only a 1000-2000 winds or something. Any idea why that is?
 
Re: 1000k and 750K pickup resistance

numbers like these often indicate an issue within the coil. I.e.: a short.

Sounds like he has a "long!" :)

It would help if we could also see how your measuring this. Are you holding the leads with your fingers? Are you clipping on to the pickup wires? Are you measuring at the jack, with the pup installed? All this info helps.
 
Re: 1000k and 750K pickup resistance

20190618_144254.jpg
This is the working pickup

And I make the picture with everything laying down on my bed. With one hand I make the picture, with the other I hold the lead wire of my pickup against the wires of the multimeter. For the last picture, I got someone to help me. The measurements are like this whether I hold it, one or two hands, or the other person holds it
 
Re: 1000k and 750K pickup resistance

That's the thing, and I'll admit this is a long shot, but you might be measuring the resistance through your fingers. I always measure pups with clip-ons. The resistance through your fingers should be much higher, but given the right conditions, (perspiration, high humidity), it could be a factor. I'm grasping at straws here because you have an unusual situation.
 
Re: 1000k and 750K pickup resistance

1) Don't use the 200K setting on your meter, use 20K

2) You have to make sure no part of your body, other wires or metal objects (including table) are touching the leads. Consider investing in a set of alligator clips to clamp the wires in place of trying to hold them with your fingers

3) Depending on a number of factors, including bobbin size and tension on the wire when winding, 2000 full turns of 42 AWG should put you somewhere near 1.5K-1.6K. 8000 turns should put you closer to the ~6.0K range, which is common for a Strat single coil.

4) Are you sure the magnets are properly magnetized? Common issue...can't have sound if there's no magnetic field to create a signal through the coil.

5) Why are you hiding the pickups from us? We won't judge...

:)
 
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Re: 1000k and 750K pickup resistance

Thanks for the responses ;)

If I use the 20K setting, it reads 1. Mine reads 1, when the resistance is to high --> it's more than 20k

I'll measure again tomorrow, using alligator clips etc. I hadn't even considered that might be the problem, thanks!

They are new rod magnets, all from the same shipment. I'll swap them tomorrow to try.

I'm not hiding them ;)
Because I had to hold the wires in one hand, it was rather difficult to make a proper picture. When I test everything tomorrow, I'll be sure to make new picture. And I'm definitely not ashamed, they are gorgeous

Thanks for the responses!
 
Re: 1000k and 750K pickup resistance

But if there is a short, there shouldn't be any sound. Right?

It's perfectly possible to obtain a sound from a coil with a short. The only difference is that such a coil behaves like a capacitor rather than like a resistor: it makes mad multimeters - and it thins out the tone, which might explain your feeling of a "weak" sound.

A "capacitive" coil is technically broken but musically useable. Example: http://www.tdpri.com/threads/don-mares-50-cent-nancy-pickup-mod.289815/

A similar problem was most probably defining another famous tone, evoked here: http://forum.metropoulos.net/viewtopic.php?f=16&t=23533

NOTES:
1-I've repaired more than once "capacitive" coils. A pro musician that I know had TWO humbuckers with this problem in two different guitars. In each case measurements were the same: over the roof DCR (or no DCR at all) and a capacitance around 4 or 5 nF, as stated by Don Mare.
2-A wire not yet broken but stretched to death might theoretically give measurements like yours. Unless the culprit is simply a cold solder joint (if the insulation of the wire has not quite melted under the soldering iron, for example).

FWIW. :-)
 
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Re: 1000k and 750K pickup resistance

Hello everyone,
Sorry to keep you all waiting, you must be extremely excited for updates:
I just measured everything again, all three, using alligator clips. As it turns out, this was indeed the missing link
1 has a DCR of 1.24K, which doesn't sound like a lot, but as I mentioned earlier, it is supposed to be extremely underwound.
2 and 3 have infinite, or at least to high a resistance. I think I messed up somehow while winding them ¯\_(ツ)_/¯. I will he checking the solderjoints later today, maybe that's where the problem lives. If not, I must have broken the wire, somewhere, I think.

Does anyone have any advice on this? How not to break my wire/mess this up?

And here are some pictures:
20190622_142915.jpg
This is pickup 1
20190622_142915.jpg
 
Re: 1000k and 750K pickup resistance

If they still read to high after reflowing, you have to cut the wires. But watch out not to marr the bobbin, while cutting. I use to examine the bobbin carefully and sand it with superfine sandpaper to avoid any catches, which injure the wire while winding. Just an advice from someone who had all kinds of winding accidents.
 
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