Re: humbucker mounting: how did he do it? (Roman content)
2 common ways to do it, each with pros and cons:
1. Mount the pickup before you glue the (pre routed) top on.
Pros: pickups cannot be dislodged by anything short of a Drone strike, looks clean all around
Cons: A thousand ways from here on in to damage the pickups during construction, have to nail the pickup height, pickups not easily replaceable (I know how to do it, I know how to do it!

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2. pickups are routed from the back
Pros: Pickups are easily replaced at any time, height can still be adjusted, guitar construction is otherwise unhindered.
Cons: backplates and a big chunk of wood missing. You can fill the cavities and match the covers and glue them shut, but then you lose all the pros of this method and gain all the cons of method 1. Possible, but a very inefficient way to do it.
Side note: If all pans out, there will soon be a "And then there´s the way
I do it" way which will offer more adjustability and position control than before, and maintain full replaceability. Without the cost of woodwork OR construction efficiency. "Unfortunately", it won`t work with every pickup as it`s implementation is very much dependent on the method of construction used. But if you can afford to have me build you a custom guitar then you can afford to have the Duncan CS wind you 2 pickups that sound exactly like whatever you want , muahahaha :firedevil:chairfall
There are of course other ways like epoxying the bobbins and magnet to the wood, also with their pros and cons. But these require actual modification of the pickup. He could have simply ground the baseplate down to minimum possible dimensions and glued it to the guitar. Then again, ER also uses "Black Backs", which have black baseplates, so it may even be an illuion to some extent.
And I`ve seen people experiment with drilling a hole between the ends of the bobbins, but when you short out almost every pickup after 2 or 3 height adjustments you
*Edit* Or, as vasshu suggested, like Parker does. Some of the polepieces are extra long and are what hold the pickup to the guitar. They screw into brads in the body. Completely forgot about that one.
