Slotted poles vs hex poles

Status
Not open for further replies.
Re: Slotted poles vs hex poles

The mass shift changes tone as you are moving the field on x axis right under the string, the reson why polepice top part mass affects tone is the same as to why distance from top of the pole to bottom of the string affects tone, but in a slightlier way.

Suppose one screw type makes the magnetic field below the string more diffused, so that it evenly magnetizes seven millimeters of strign width above the pickup instead of five millimeters, or changes the "aperture" by that little bit. The only known consequence of aperture width is comb filtering, so the question reduces to, what's the difference in comb filtering between five and seven millimeters? Nothing you can hear, as only very, very high frequencies are physically that narrow.
 
Re: Slotted poles vs hex poles

Hmn filter-trons comes to mind on bigger screw head, if i remember correctly zhang from zhangbucker offers bigger head screws on some pickups and the difference is very notable

Wanna take that to the extreme?, compare a jb with double rows of scews with a dean tyrant (jb clone with invader like hex caps)

The difference is really "in your face", way more percissive low end and thump

sent from my crappy junk-phone
 
Re: Slotted poles vs hex poles

If the screw is substantially larger, a couple things happens that will indeed increase bass; first the inductance goes up because you replace air core with steel core by some percentage, second you get more eddy current attenuation, and the screw head is important in that respect because it's right in between the coil and the string, where most all of the magnetic action is. But when talking about the difference between slot and hex, the difference in volume is superficial.

I saw it mentioned in another thread that they put a series cap in the invader neck pickup in order to cut down on the low end. I'd be willing to bet that it was necessary in order to brighten up the pickup, as a result of the large screw heads causing the high end to be excessively attenuated for a decent clean tone in the neck.
 
Re: Slotted poles vs hex poles

I'll tell you what's painful, all the make believe and appeal to authority fallacy.
You think you're the authority, so I'm going to treat you as you treat authority.

Nobody really knows how or why "more mass near the string" could or would effect the tone
A lot of other people, much more knowledgeable than you, do. Not that it takes a lot, mind you. ;)

So, let get this straight right away: when you say "nobody", what you really mean is that, as YOU don't know, you just can't wrap your tiny head around even contemplating the remote possibility of somebody would. That's narcissistic personality disorder taken word-by-word directly from the manual!

This isn't trolling
No, that's the quintessence, the very definition of trolling!

a lot of people who are ignoring good old fashioned logic, and getting upset by the fact.
Funny you said that, as you're the only one getting upset by facts. As a matter of fact, pun intended, you get so upset that every single time you're confronted with a fact, you dismiss it by sheer denial.

Making a slight change to a magnetic field does not change the sound all by itself, there must be a reason that specific change effects the tone, and that tone must be change in some identifiable way. Nobody is addressing either of these things, they're just assuming that some change, no matter how small or inconsequential it might be, must change the sound.
If you actually think that what you wrote here makes any sense whatsoever, then I got two words for you: THINK AGAIN! ;)
 
Re: Slotted poles vs hex poles

in the end you never knew whether it was the head shape or other properties of the screw that made the difference you believe you heard
You realize this statement is a train wreck, with TWO locomotives and toxic waste spill to boot, don't you? ;)
 
Re: Slotted poles vs hex poles

I am going to go ahead and close this for now, as it has ceased to be helpful. I will suggest the ignore button which does wonders for blocking out ceaseless arguments.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top