NoobLuthier
New member
Hey all,
I recently broke ground on my first guitar-building project: The body has been cut out and I'm ready to start work on the pickup cavities. I'm using Burns Tri-Sonic pickups, which are much wider than the typical single coil (yet obviously much thinner than a humbucker), and I'm trying to devise a method for mounting them in an aesthetically-pleasing way. I'm using really nice AAA quilted maple as a veneer, which I think would be a shame to hide behind a pickguard or mounting rings, and (as far as I know) neither of these products are available for Tri-Sonic-sized pickups, anyway.
The problem is that I really want each pickup to sit tightly in its cavity, with no screws or "wings" visible from the front of the guitar (see the Parker Fly below for reference). I'm not totally clear on how the Parker Fly mounting system actually works, but the little information I've found on the subject leads me to think that it's not applicable to my Tri-Sonics—though I'd love to find out that I'm wrong on this. I haven't eliminated the possibility of routing from the back, but I suspect the fact that I'm using Gotoh's vintage 6-hole tremolo would make that difficult or maybe impossible (as the tremolo springs will lie directly under the bridge and middle pickups).

Proposed solution: Find a way to remove the mounting "wings" that hold the screws on each side of the pickup (leaving a perfect oblong shape), and dropping the pickups directly into their respective cavities, which would be carefully fashioned to ensure a tight fit. I'm thinking that the snug fit, along with a thick layer of glue coating the bottom of the cavity, would probably be enough to secure the pickups in place. However, since I have no experience whatsoever in this area, I was hoping that someone else could confirm that this mission isn't doomed from the start. Any advice, large or small, is greatly appreciated.
I recently broke ground on my first guitar-building project: The body has been cut out and I'm ready to start work on the pickup cavities. I'm using Burns Tri-Sonic pickups, which are much wider than the typical single coil (yet obviously much thinner than a humbucker), and I'm trying to devise a method for mounting them in an aesthetically-pleasing way. I'm using really nice AAA quilted maple as a veneer, which I think would be a shame to hide behind a pickguard or mounting rings, and (as far as I know) neither of these products are available for Tri-Sonic-sized pickups, anyway.
The problem is that I really want each pickup to sit tightly in its cavity, with no screws or "wings" visible from the front of the guitar (see the Parker Fly below for reference). I'm not totally clear on how the Parker Fly mounting system actually works, but the little information I've found on the subject leads me to think that it's not applicable to my Tri-Sonics—though I'd love to find out that I'm wrong on this. I haven't eliminated the possibility of routing from the back, but I suspect the fact that I'm using Gotoh's vintage 6-hole tremolo would make that difficult or maybe impossible (as the tremolo springs will lie directly under the bridge and middle pickups).

Proposed solution: Find a way to remove the mounting "wings" that hold the screws on each side of the pickup (leaving a perfect oblong shape), and dropping the pickups directly into their respective cavities, which would be carefully fashioned to ensure a tight fit. I'm thinking that the snug fit, along with a thick layer of glue coating the bottom of the cavity, would probably be enough to secure the pickups in place. However, since I have no experience whatsoever in this area, I was hoping that someone else could confirm that this mission isn't doomed from the start. Any advice, large or small, is greatly appreciated.