Re: Pickup phasing
OK.
First of all, the term phase is incorrectly used in relation to pickups. Phase is a term that refers to the relative position of two waveforms in their vibration cycle.
When people talk of phase they usually mean polarity. A pickup can't be reverse polarity in isolation, it can only be so relative to another pickup, just as a waveform can only have a phase relationship to another waveform.
The most common application of reverse polarity pickups is in noise cancellation. A humbucker is a reverse wound, reversed polarity pair. The middle pickup of a modern strat is also reverse wound and reversed polarity, or rwrp for short.
In its simplest form a pickup is just a coil around a magnet. When something magnetically sensitive, such as a steel guitar string moves inside the pickups magnetic field, small disturbances in the field ripple out and cause proportional currents to be induced in the surrounding coil; these currents create a fluctuating voltage at the coil terminals which are used to signal the input of an amplifier.
The problem with this arrangement is that the coil can also pick up noise from the electromagnetic ocean in which we are immersed; typically 50 or 60 Hz hum, depending on where you are in the world.
Flipping the polarity of a coil by simply reversing the coil terminals relative to the other pickup with which it is in circuit also flips the polarity of the noise signal so that a + voltage flagged at the signal terminal of one coil is matched by a - voltage at the same terminal of the other coil, causing them to cancel each other. This will also flip the signal induced by the string and cause this to cancel as well, but because the signal from the string is dependent upon the polarity of the magnetic core, by flipping the polarity of the core we can restore the polarity relationship of the signals induced in each coil. Because the noise signal is not dependent on the magnetic polarity of the core the noise cancelling effect of the pickup pair is maintained.