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Author Topic: had a stab at potting pickups  (Read 4054 times)

gwEm

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had a stab at potting pickups
« on: April 24, 2007, 10:41:41 AM »
i had a couple of gigs over the weekend, and hadn't finished pimping the guitar i wanted to use. it was all a bit last minute, so i decided to pot the pickups in the guitar myself rather than sending them to bkp.

actually, it went really well. i dont know if its the way these things are supposed to be done, but the pickups (some old gibson dirty fingers) aren't the slightest bit microphonic anymore. heres what i did, for comments from the experts, and inspiration to the guys who didn't do it before.

1) took the pickups out the guitar

2) i washed out an old tin can, and drilled four holes in the top edge (see pic). the can was the 'standard' size and was totally ok, but i think maybe a wider can would make things a bit easier.

3) called some art shops, to see if they had any candlemaking wax

4) went to said art shop, and instead of buying standard paraffin candlemaking wax, i saw they had a batik wax. no idea what its for, but its a mix of paraffin and beeswax, which i read online is meant to be better. 250g tuned out to be an ideal amount, not too much, and should be enough for quite a few pups i reckon. the wax cost a fiver.

5) boiled some water in a pan, and suspended the tin can in it, using chopsticks (see pic). then i put in the wax

6) it took ages to melt enough wax to fully submerge a pickup - this was the most boring bit. probably a good idea to pot as many pickups at once as possible. the wax smelled really nice of honey. i was careful to keep the heat low - not to cause the wax to set on fire.

7) i dipped each pickup in the melted wax. i dipped them in 4 or 5 different positions, and left them until the air bubbles stopped coming, tapping them occasionally to encourage air bubbles to escape. overall, each pickup took about 20 minutes to fully pot.

8) i let the pickups drip melted wax back into the can, although there was not much. the pickups were hot, but i could easily handle them shortly with the hard skin on my guitar hand.

9) i then left the pickups on old newspaper to cool for a few hours. i wiped them with toliet paper, to remove surplus wax whilst it was still hot and melted.

10) the pickups do sound a bit different now, but i cant put my finger on what exactly. there are totally non-microphonic.
Quote from: AndyR
you wouldn't use the meat knife on crusty bread but, equally, the serrated knife and straight edge knife aren't going to go through raw meat as quickly

FELINEGUITARS

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had a stab at potting pickups
« Reply #1 on: April 24, 2007, 11:35:31 AM »
Hmm- cant see or see how to downloadthe pictures for some reason

We have a wax bath that we use for pickup potting which was originally designed for doing parafin wax treatment in a beauty salon - one of the benefits of having a beauty therapist for a girlfriend

I use a special low melting point wax that I found after doing a lot of research
Works just great
As gwEm said the worst bit is waiting for the wax to melt - boring!

Works a treat though
Can stop microphonic feedback
Doesn't stop you yearning for BKPs though!!

EDIT: I can see the pix now - nice one!!
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gwEm

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had a stab at potting pickups
« Reply #2 on: April 24, 2007, 11:44:03 AM »
weird, the pics were there a minute ago, now i cant see them either. i just uploaded them again and seem to be ok again now.

agree with feline - the potted dirty finger are good pickups (better than most commercial pups), but cant compare to the extra shimmer and life handmade gives.
Quote from: AndyR
you wouldn't use the meat knife on crusty bread but, equally, the serrated knife and straight edge knife aren't going to go through raw meat as quickly

Tarzan

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had a stab at potting pickups
« Reply #3 on: April 24, 2007, 08:27:40 PM »
Nice!! I don't think i would ever trust myself to do that, i'd be way too scared that something would go terribly wrong, and i'd end up with no pickup at all.