I bought my Strat used back in 1975. It had a after-market bridge pickup that I've only recently identified as a Seymour Duncan Quarter Pounder (sticker on back says '4R'. It is a 1975 Strat, so the pickup must be 1975 or older.
I'm a 'neck pickup' kinda guy, so I never used this pickup much (or any bridge pickup on any guitar). But it seemed to work fine - very high output as compared to the stock fender pickups.
About 2 years ago I replaced it with an SD JB Jr.
I was going to put this up for sale on ebay, but when I ohmed it out it reads ~3 Mega ohms and counts up. I connected the wires to my amp, tapped on it and it seems to be alive. I held it about 1/4" above the strings on my guitar and it seems to work O.K. I can only assume that the coil must have a hairline crack.
What would the cost be to have Seymour Duncan rewind it, and what would it's approximate market value be if I got it rewound?
Does it have any intrinsic historic value with the coil as is?
I'm a 'neck pickup' kinda guy, so I never used this pickup much (or any bridge pickup on any guitar). But it seemed to work fine - very high output as compared to the stock fender pickups.
About 2 years ago I replaced it with an SD JB Jr.
I was going to put this up for sale on ebay, but when I ohmed it out it reads ~3 Mega ohms and counts up. I connected the wires to my amp, tapped on it and it seems to be alive. I held it about 1/4" above the strings on my guitar and it seems to work O.K. I can only assume that the coil must have a hairline crack.
What would the cost be to have Seymour Duncan rewind it, and what would it's approximate market value be if I got it rewound?
Does it have any intrinsic historic value with the coil as is?