P
Plessure
Guest
As the signal is strongest in the middle of a string's vibration path, a pickup should be placed under the octave fret. The bridge pickup is already a standard, but the neck pickup doesn't represent the other extreme end. There should be pickups all the way between the octave fret and the bridge. There should be pickups inside the neck.
Considering the practical limitations of guitar construction, it's not strange that pickup placement has traditionally been done the way it has. Nevertheless, it's important to realize that this is a compromise and to be aware of the theoretical possibilities.
So, we need a coil that fits into the neck. It needs to accomodate for a truss rod. Any other problems?
Another way to achieve the same full-spectrum pickup characteristics would be to have a shorter neck and fretboard which ends around the octave, so as to have more of the scale length free for pickup placement. That would make it a different instrument entirely, though. Many electric guitar players do a lot of playing above the octave.
Considering the practical limitations of guitar construction, it's not strange that pickup placement has traditionally been done the way it has. Nevertheless, it's important to realize that this is a compromise and to be aware of the theoretical possibilities.
So, we need a coil that fits into the neck. It needs to accomodate for a truss rod. Any other problems?
Another way to achieve the same full-spectrum pickup characteristics would be to have a shorter neck and fretboard which ends around the octave, so as to have more of the scale length free for pickup placement. That would make it a different instrument entirely, though. Many electric guitar players do a lot of playing above the octave.
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