Longitudinally Divided Pickup Structure and Switching Apparatus
20210043179 ยท 2021-02-11
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G10H3/187
PHYSICS
G10H3/186
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A guitar pickup is provided that is divided into a plurality of segments that can be selectively activated by switching to produce tonal variations.
Claims
1. A split coil guitar pickup comprising a single row of at least four pole pieces mounted between top flatwork and bottom flatwork wherein a first plurality of pole pieces is wound with at least about 6000 turns of wire in a clockwise direction to form a first coil and a second plurality of adjacent pole pieces is wound with at least about 6000 turns of wire in a counterclockwise direction to form a second coil.
2. The split coil guitar pickup of claim 1 wherein there are six pole pieces in the single row.
3. The split coil guitar pickup of claim 2 wherein each of the first plurality of pole pieces and second plurality of pole pieces comprise three pole pieces.
4. The split coil guitar pickup of claim 1 wherein the top flatwork and the bottom flatwork are comprised of separate flatwork pieces for each of the first and second pluralities of pole pieces.
5. The split coil guitar pickup of claim 1 wherein each of the first and second pluralities of pole pieces is wound with at least about 7,000 turns of wire.
6. The split coil guitar pickup of claim 1 wherein the bottom flatwork of the first and second pluralities of coiled pole pieces is mounted in a unitary base.
7. The split coil guitar pickup of claim 1 wherein the top flatwork of the first and second pluralities of coiled pole pieces is covered by a unitary housing.
8. The split coil guitar pickup of claim 1 wherein the row of at least four pole pieces comprises a row of a humbucker pickup.
9. The split coil guitar pickup of claim 1 wherein pickup leads are connected between the first and second coils and a switching mechanism that allows for the selective activation of the first coil, or the second coil, or both the first and the second coils.
10. A method of manufacturing a split coil guitar pickup comprising the steps of: arranging a first plurality of three pole pieces in a row between top and bottom flatwork and winding the first plurality of pole pieces with at least 6000 turns of wire in a clockwise direction to form a first coil; arranging a second plurality of pole pieces in a row between top and bottom flatwork and winding the second plurality of pole pieces with at least 6000 turns of wire in a counter-clockwise direction to form a second coil; aligning the first and second pluralities of pole pieces to form a single row of pole pieces with separate pickup leads connected to the first coil and to the second coil.
11. The method of claim 10 wherein the first and second pluralities of pole pieces are aligned on a unitary base element;
12. The method of claim 10 wherein the first and second pluralities of pole pieces are covered by a unitary housing member.
13. The method of claim 10 wherein the first and second pluralities of pole pieces are potted with wax.
14. A method of positioning first split coil guitar pickup according to claim 1 proximate a bridge of a guitar so that the first clockwise coil of the first split coil guitar pickup is positioned beneath low strings of the guitar and the second counterclockwise coil of the first split coil guitar pickup is positioned beneath high strings of the guitar and pickup leads from the first clockwise coil and the second counterclockwise coil are connected to a switch that is operable to direct current to neither, both or a selected one of said first and second coils of the first split coil guitar pickup.
15. The method of claim 14 further comprising positioning a second split coil guitar pickup according to claim 1 proximate a neck of said guitar so that the first clockwise coil of the second split coil guitar pickup is positioned beneath high strings of the guitar and the second counterclockwise coil of the second split coil guitar pickup is positioned beneath low strings of the guitar and pickup leads from the first clockwise coil and the second counterclockwise coil are connected to the switch that is operable to direct current to neither, both or a selected one of said first and second coils of the second split coil guitar pickup.
16. The method of claim 15 further comprising the switch being operable to select the first clockwise coil of the first split coil guitar pickup beneath the low strings, together with the first clockwise coil of the second split coil guitar pickup beneath the high strings, and further together with a selected one of the second counterclockwise coils of either the first split coil guitar pickup or the second split coil guitar pickup.
17. The method of claim 15 wherein the switch is configurable to provide for selective activation of at least five different combinations of the first and second coils of the first and second split coil guitar pickups.
18. The method of claim 14 further comprising positioning a second split coil guitar pickup according to claim 1 proximate a neck of said guitar so that the first clockwise coil of the second split coil guitar pickup is positioned beneath low strings of the guitar and the second counterclockwise coil of the second split coil guitar pickup is positioned beneath high strings of the guitar and pickup leads from the first clockwise coil and the second counterclockwise coil are connected to the switch that is operable to direct current to neither, both or a selected one of said first and second coils of the second split coil guitar pickup, and positioning a third split coil guitar pickup according to claim 1 intermediate the first and second split cold guitar pickups so that the first clockwise coil of the third split coil guitar pickup is positioned beneath high strings of the guitar and the second counterclockwise coil of the third split coil guitar pickup is positioned beneath low strings of the guitar and pickup leads from the first clockwise coil and the second counterclockwise coil are connected to the switch that is operable to direct current to neither, both or a selected one of said first and second coils of the third split coil guitar pickup.
19. The method of claim 18 wherein the switch is configurable to provide for selective activation of at least eight different combinations of the first and second coils of the first, second, and third split coil guitar pickups.
20. The method of claim 18 wherein the switch is digitally programmable with at least twelve different combinations of the first and second coils of the first, second, and third split coil guitar pickups.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0021] Referring to
[0022] The FENDER system originally employed the three spaced single coil pickups and a control switch that could select either fingerboard, middle or bridge pickup by itself. As described below, this switch soon evolved to include certain intended combinations of pickups. The GIBSON system used only the two, spaced dual coil humbucker pickups and allowed switching for selection of the fingerboard/neck pickup, both pickups combined, and the bridge pickup.
[0023] Each system has inherent advantages and disadvantages. The GIBSON system is very simple and allows rapid transition from the fingerboard pickup to the bridge pickup, permitting the player to go from chords to lead quickly. A drawback might be its versatility in that only three sounds are easily available. The FENDER system has three combinations of pickup coil that are unavailable on the GIBSON, i.e., fingerboard plus middle coil, middle coil alone, and middle coil plus bridge. However, there is no way to get both fingerboard and bridge pickups together without additional or customized switching.
[0024] The single-coil pickups commonly used on FENDER-style guitars have generally lower output but a cleaner sound than GIBSON outputs using the dual humbuckers. There are times when this is useful and times when the player may desire the full GIBSON tonality.
[0025] The pickup switch 18 is a key to the FENDER STRATOCASTER'S tonal versatility because it controls which pickups or which combinations of pickups are on at any given time as reflected in the operation of the five-way switch detailed in
[0031] There is no means of having all three pickups active at once and over time different switching systems have been used with this arrangement of pickups. Until 1977 the pickup selector was a three-position switch and the bridge pickup 16, middle pickup 14, or neck pickup 12 could be turned on individually but no combinations. Guitarists experimented and managed to position the switches in the in-between spots to activate the bridge and middle pickup 16,14 or the middle and neck pickup 14,12 and produce different tonality with these dual pickup combinations. The introduction of the five-way switch 18 allowed these combinations to be explicitly selected. The guitar 10 is also provided both with a volume knob 20 and with two tone knobs 22, 24 that can generally be used to reduce higher frequency sounds.
[0032] The principal types of pickups used in electric guitars are the single-coil pickups illustrated in
[0033] Plucking a string causes the pickup to produce a low-powered electronic signal that corresponds to the string's vibrations. The signal is then amplified to a level capable of driving speakers. By producing sound waves, the speaker converts the electronic signal back into mechanical energy, mirroring the strings behavior.
[0034] Single coil pickups were first introduced in the 1930s, but as amplification increased, various types of electronic magnetic interference were introduced that was reflected in buzzes and hums in the amplified sound broadcast through speakers. Two techniques were devised to address this electrical interference. In the 1950s, GIBSON introduced the Humbucking pickup, commonly referred to as Humbuckers, which contained two coils that are wired out of phase with each other. This wiring causes the hum generated by each coil to be cancelled out by the other coil but requires additional space on the face of the guitar to accommodate two rows of poles beneath the strings. Single coil pickups were adapted to minimize hum and buzz by winding separate pickups in different directions so that the neck pickup 12 and bridge pickup 16 might be wound in clockwise fashion while the middle pickup 14 would be wound in counterclockwise fashion. In addition, the pole pieces might be oriented with south pole facing upward on the neck 12 and bridge 16 pickups while the north pole might be facing upward in the pole pieces in the middle pickup 14.
[0035] The double coil Humbucker type pickups are sometimes split so that one or both rows of six pole pieces can be activated selectively. However, pickups used for tonal selection generally extend across all the strings of a particular guitar.
[0036] The strings of an electric guitar are generally identified from bottom to top as: [0037] High E String; [0038] B String; [0039] G String; [0040] D String; [0041] A String; and [0042] Low E String.
The High E and B strings are solid wire, while the Low E, D and A strings are wound wire. The G string may be solid or wound at the preference of the individual guitarist. The solid or plain string can result in less finger noise and is easier to bend but may not have as full an intonation as an appropriately selected wound string where the winding can alter the tonality.
[0043] The structure of an example of a longitudinally divided pickup is shown in
[0044] However, when making a divided longitudinal row of pole pieces, the flatwork must be in separate pieces to facilitate winding so that, as shown in
[0045] Generally, a lower number of turns produced a brighter sound and a greater number of turns produces a warmer sound. Also, a lower number of turns leads to a lower magnetic field and a lower volume signal being produced. Less than about 7000 turns may lead to some strings generating an inadequate signal. Once wound, the ends of the coiled wire are connected to pickup leads that pass through the openings 51,52 in bottom flatwork 44b and openings 53,54 and bottom flatwork 44a. The leads are then wired to the switching mechanism, one example of which is shown in
[0046] It can be seen that the pole pieces in the coils 46, 48 may be magnetized separately to orient the polarity in the same or opposite directions and the pickups may be taped or potted with wax or similar material to protect the windings and help eliminate unwanted feedback.
[0047] Although illustrated in connection with a single coil pickup, the same technique can be applied to Humbucker arrangement so that the two rows of a Humbucker are each divided into plurality of segments. In this fashion for instance, the first row of the Humbucker might be divided into two groups of three pole pieces and the second row of the Humbucker divided into two groups of three pole pieces and guitarist could select to activate any one, two, three, or four of the pole piece groups contained within the Humbucker configuration. Similarly, the polarity of each group within the Humbucker assembly can be selected and even a different number of coil windings applied to facilitate the preferred tonal characteristics.
[0048] In connection with the split longitudinal pickup coil arrangements, switching becomes potentially complex rather than having two Humbuckers comprising four rows of pole pieces or three single coil pickups, the guitar now contains six or eight, or potentially even more separately addressable pickup assemblies. The number of potential combinations can be limited by wiring design at installation, as is the case with the five-position switch 18 employed on FENDER STRATOCASTER or more complex switching arrangements can be employed. For instance, there exist twenty position rotary switches, or it is also possible to utilize a digital switch that can address any possible combination of pole assemblies.
[0049] An exemplary five-position switching arrangement is shown in the schematic of a 5-position, 4-pole switch 70 in
[0050] Changes may be made in combination and arrangements as heretofore set forth in the specification and shown in the drawings; it being understood that changes may be made in the embodiments disclosed without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the following claims.