PicoRiveraTele
New member
Re: Tappable Humbucker
I haven't "guessed" about anything.
I haven't "guessed" about anything.
all of duncans production tapped pups are tapped half way through the coil as far as i know.
...except that a tapped SSL-5 doesn't sound anything like a lower output SSL-1. Have you actually compared them?!?because of that capacitance caused by the extra chunk of coil, which drives the resonant peak down to where it would be if it were wound to 6.5k with 42 AWG. So you might have SSL-1-like tone,
...except that a tapped SSL-5 doesn't sound anything like a lower output SSL-1. Have you actually compared them?!?
Here's how it works out. Consider the SSL-5 for example, it has a full DC resistance of about 13k, and a tapped DC resistance about half that, 6.5k, which seems close to an SSL-1 which also has a 6.5k DC resistance... but the SSL-5 presumably uses 43 AWG wire, so the tap point is actually significantly under-wound relative to an SSL-1, and it more comparable to a 5.0k Strat pickup if it were to be wound with 42AWG, and so it produces inductance, and voltage output, comparable to a 5.0k Strat pickup. Despite the low output, it doesn't sound as thin as a 5.0k Strat pickup, because of that capacitance caused by the extra chunk of coil, which drives the resonant peak down to where it would be if it were wound to 6.5k with 42 AWG. So you might have SSL-1-like tone, but you don't have SSL-1-like voltage. They could tap the SSL-5 at 8k instead of 6.5k, and then you'd have voltage similar to an SSL-1, but now the pickup sounds dark, and customers will complain that tapping the pickup doesn't change the tone enough to make it worth while.
Coil tapping doesn't have to be a gimmick, but the way it's done causes it to become one. The new Fishman Fluence pickup set proudly features the ability to switch between output levels, they certainly don't treat it like a gimmick.
I think I can put this debate to rest... please ignore the hollering grandchildren in the background.
What I'm looking for is winding myself something similar to two Quarter Pound pickups that tap to about PAF output. To be able to go from thick and creamy to bright and articulate. I might get the Custom Shop to do it, they'd know more than me.
But if I give up the ability to coil split could it be done with 4 conductors?
That's false logic. SSL-5 and SSL-1 have all these differences you state. Tapping it to same is not going to sound same even without the effect of coil taken into account. I'm pretty sure that is noted when designing the pickups in the first place.
But it still seems rather unlikely that tapping it in the middle just happens to be the best option for all SD single coils...
You're kinda putting words in my mouth. The fact that they have similar resonant peaks doesn't mean they will sound the same, rather it's to say that getting the tapped treble response up to a certain point is a bare minimum towards reaching that goal. The amount of resonance might differ. The lower output of a tapped SSL-5 also means it's not hitting the front of the amp as hard as an SSL-1, which can also cause the tone to differ.
Well let's put the question to Seymour Duncan Co... "why have you intentionally made your tapped pickups sound bad for over thirty five years???"
Please don't make me lock my own thread. I didn't ask in the original post whether or not Seymour Duncan knows what they are doing, nor do I care. My question was about the easiest way to wire a tappable humbucker with the least amount of wires.
There must be some mistake; the reply you quoted was not in response to anything you posted.
Why try to get so complicated when the result isn't going to perform noticeably different than a StagMag in parallel or split?!
I mean, if it's just out of curiosity or for fun, then God bless you and enjoy the ride. But if you're expecting some magnificent tone that the world hasn't heard yet...well that's not going to happen with what you're trying to do.
Or you could just put 2 Quarter Pounds together and wire one of them with a separate vol pot (ala spin-a-split).
I hope this is on topic, but I always thought it might be interesting to mount two Hot Rails, or Cool Rails, or any single-sized humbucker for that matter, side by side so that you could sequentially select any combination of the four coils. Seems like there'd be a lot of versatility, tone wise, in that configuration.

The requirement here would cause any control layout to become ridiculous.