Showing posts with label bass pickups. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bass pickups. Show all posts

Monday 24 April 2023

Precision Bass

Precision Bass split pair is based on the Fenders of the early/mid 60’s. Full and clear with that distinctive mid range that sits well in any mix. It is the essence of bass. It has the woody, full tones we all love. As a stand alone or used with my Jazz Bass bridge pickup as part of a PJ set.


 Alnico V - 10.9 kOhms

www.mrglynspickups.com

Arguably the most important instrument of all of Leo Fender’s creations the Precision bass changed music more than any other instrument. From James Jameson to Steve Harris, the P Bass is surprisingly versatile and has such a distinctive tone.

As with the early pickups this split pair is built to be hum cancelling – the two coils are electrically out of phase but also magnetically out of phase. Here’s an explanation: How Humbuckers Work

With fingers, with a pick and especially with flat wounds.

My Precision Bass pickups are designed to be used with 250 K Ohm pots.


Precision bass pickup my mr glyns pickups

For more P Bass fun: https://mrglynspickups.com/2021/04/06/bass-pickup-re-wind/

Tuesday 21 March 2023

Telecaster Bass

There is something so unbelievably cool about the Fender Telecaster Bass. 

The classic lines, that headstock, the pickguard, the association with great players and, of course, the tone. 

What ever it is we all love about this great instrument here’s a pickup to do it justice.

 


 

 https://mrglynspickups.com/2022/10/14... 

 Whether you play with fingers or a pick this classic pickup will deliver. 

More present in the mix than the Precision split pair but with that distinctive punch and clarity. This bass is also known as a '51Bass.

 

 Over the years I’ve re-wound a lot of old Fender pickups. I like to make notes to record what I find in these old pickups, wire gauge, insulation types, d.c. resistance, magnetic gauss, dimensions. 

My notebook is getting pretty full. 

This is my constant reference when I’m designing a new pickup, that and my ears. I’ve based these pickups on the best of the old Fenders I’ve come across over the years.

 Not all vintage pickups are great but when you see enough of the good ones patterns begin to form. 

 I still repair pickups and still add to my old notebook, always learning 😎. 

Thanks to Mark Hughes for his playing on this bass pickup demo, he is available for on line lessons http://www.markhughesbass.com/ Telecaster Bass Pickup - Mr Glyn's Pickups





Sunday 13 June 2021

‘78 Musicman Stingray Bass pickup re-wind

 Mr Glyn's Pickups

The Musicman Stingray bass is for me one of the top 3 basses ever – the Precision, the Jazz and the Stingray cover pretty much everything between them. A big part of what makes the Stingray so good is the Musicman Stingray Bass pickup

It has such a distinctive sound. Once you’re tuned into it you can hear it on so many recordings.

This pickup is from 1978 (they started in 1976) and was sent to me from a customer in Christchurch. I thought I’d show you around inside it – these are really interesting pickups.

‘78 Musicman Stingray Bass pickup

The Musicman Stingray Bass pickup is by the look of it a big fat humbucker but there’s more to it.

The magnets are big alnicoV’s, 3/8” diameter and 5/8” deep so a lot of the power and grunt comes from them. The 2 coils are wound with awg 42 wire and are around 4KOhms each (they vary). The poles on each coil have opposite polarity and the coils are wired out of phase electrically so they act as a humbucker. The really interesting part is the coils are wired in parallel, not in series like most humbuckers.

The sound of 2 coils in parallel is the sound of a Jazz bass with both pickups on or a Strat on switch position 2 or 4. It’s a very distinctive, clear tone with a very clear midrange and chimney bass.

So the distinctive Stingray sound comprises of fairly low powered coils in parallel to give plenty of clarity but with exceptionally fat magnets to give bass and grunty mids.

I haven’t mentioned the active circuit the signal goes through yet but that’s another story.

‘78 Musicman Stingray Bass pickup

As you can see, under the cover it looks very similar to ‘Fender’ pickups.

‘78 Musicman Stingray Bass pickup

One coil was open circuit so I cut the windings out. There was tape wrapped around the magnets to protect the coil. I left that in. I love the way they staggered the pole pieces but kept the magnets the same size.

pickup re-wind

The original winding wire is insulated with red poly. Unfortunately I only had Poly insulation in the natural colour – that’s my coil on the right.

MusicMan Stingray Pickup

And there she is, all ready to go back in to the bass. https://mrglynspickups.com/

If anyone has a faulty pickup just give me a call 021912678 or email mrglynspickups@gmail.com

Take a look at my YouTube series “Mr Glyn Meets Your Maker” where I have chat with manufacturers of musical gear from around New Zealand