As the subject says, I bought a '64 strat for $125 that had the finish aggressively removed with a sander. The body was at least a 1/4" reduced in thickness. Luckly, they were less aggressive with the neck which had a quite thick profile.
After I put a thin Poly finish on, I ended up with a nice playing guitar but the tone and sustain suffered from the dreaded double notes caused with strats that have pickups too close to the strings. I am an electronic tech so I understand the simple tech of magnetic pickups. I measured the pickups and all three showed continuity between the poles and the windings. Well... if you have a source driving an almost perfect short-the string being the source, on a guitar you will have low output and funky sustain!
So, the lesson here is that you can test an old pickup not only for resistance between +/- but between each magnet and "-".
..Joe L
After I put a thin Poly finish on, I ended up with a nice playing guitar but the tone and sustain suffered from the dreaded double notes caused with strats that have pickups too close to the strings. I am an electronic tech so I understand the simple tech of magnetic pickups. I measured the pickups and all three showed continuity between the poles and the windings. Well... if you have a source driving an almost perfect short-the string being the source, on a guitar you will have low output and funky sustain!
So, the lesson here is that you can test an old pickup not only for resistance between +/- but between each magnet and "-".
..Joe L