Question About Base Plates for Single Coils.. ​​​​​​​.

zozoe

New member
Question About Base Plates for Single Coils.. ​​​​​​​.

Greetings,, & not to get caught up in their effectiveness, are they all pretty of equal composition w/similar potential results... Callaham, Fralin, Mill City (at only 9 bucks!!)....?
Thnx all~
 
Basically all the same. There may be minor variations in thickness of the steel.
But I don't think the carbon content makes much difference, as it does with some components.
So probably all about the same effectiveness IMO - subtle, but audible if you listen for it.
 
What kind of single coils? Fender Strat vintage-style singles are a fiber/felt kind of base, modern ones plastic, Telecasters have metal plates, as do P-90s.
 
I went with a Fralin for my Squier CV 60s Strat. Adding the baseplate gave me what I wanted out of the bridge pickup. And I was looking at swapping all of them out too. But the stock pickups are not bad at all. Glad I went this route.
 
adding a metal baseplate to a pup seems to tame the high end a bit, which i like on a vintage output bridge pup. ive used the fralin and callaham plates and didnt really notice a difference between them
 
I went with a Fralin for my Squier CV 60s Strat. Adding the baseplate gave me what I wanted out of the bridge pickup. And I was looking at swapping all of them out too. But the stock pickups are not bad at all. Glad I went this route.

I'll have to try this with my CV 50's Strat. The bridge is just a hair too bright.
 
im all about using good 250k pots, i really like the mojotone vintage taper pots. i dont usually love a .1 cap but that is vintage correct
 
I normally don't use a .1uf cap but with these single-coils, I felt it was necessary. When I had an American Standard Strat, I put a set of Fender SCNs in it and wired it up EJ style with a .1uf cap. It sounded fantastic so my first instinct with this one was to go that route with the cap if I felt it was too bright.
 
Gentlemen, that's putting much trust in my geekiness. :-)

I had seen this topic. I've not replied because I had no useful data to share about alloys & thickness of Callaham / Fralin and other "inductance plates".

Now and if generic thoughts have any interest:

-steel baseplates boost a wee bit the inductance and alter a tad the magnetic field, making the resonant peak slightly lower pitched and flatter. Which makes the pickup theoretically warmer. But that's old news that people can find by googling...

-Yep, materials have an influence: a brass baseplate would make the resonance flatter but also and paradoxically higher pitched when measured because of Foucault currents. A copper plated steel plate would flatten the resonance too but would promote only the frequency range under resonant frequency... and so on. But that's not really relevant here, since Callaham / Fralin BP's appear to be made only of steel (whose grade is unknown: a metallurgical analysis would be necessary);

-such added baseplates haven't the same influence according to the lenght and staggering of the rod poles: flat poled single coils seem more sensitive to the presence of a steel baseplate (IME. YMMV). That's maybe the only "useful" thought that I can share here but it makes the effect of inductance plates strongly dependent on the model of pickup used. So I'm still not sure that my rambling is helping. :-P

FWIW. :-)
 
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