Wiring 2 single coils for hum cancellation
Moderator: Dave Mudgett
-
Paul Brainard
- Posts: 654
- Joined: 6 Feb 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Portland OR
Wiring 2 single coils for hum cancellation
Has anyone tried wiring the two single-coil pickups on a double-neck guitar so they are in reverse of each other when the selector switch is in the middle & both are engaged? Will this create a hum-cancelling circuit or is it not that simple?
-
Donny Hinson
- Posts: 21751
- Joined: 16 Feb 1999 1:01 am
- Location: Glen Burnie, Md. U.S.A.
Uhhhh...the pickups have to be on the same neck! Some humbucker designs are actually two separate pickups wired together, but they must be on the same neck, and they must be close to each other. I think the balance becomes a problem when they're separated by more than an inch or so, due to the nodal points of the string.
Good question, though!
Good question, though!
-
Paul Brainard
- Posts: 654
- Joined: 6 Feb 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Portland OR
Well, do they really have to be? I would think they'd each pick up the same hum on either neck. As long as they're wired 180 degrees out of phase, which is the same as reversed polarity (isn't it?), then it should cancel out when you have them both engaged. I personally don't ever use the middle switch position, but I'm thinking this might be a useful option to have in a noisy environment. Not sure how it will sound but I guess it would be easy enough to give it a try.
-
Earnest Bovine
- Posts: 8364
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Los Angeles CA USA
Yes, that should cancel most of the hum. If the source of the hum is closer to one pickup than to the other, then one signal will be stronger and they won't cancel exactly.
I think my double neck worked that way (less hum with both pickups on).
The signals are of opposite polarity, not out of phase.
I think my double neck worked that way (less hum with both pickups on).
The signals are of opposite polarity, not out of phase.
-
Earnest Bovine
- Posts: 8364
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Los Angeles CA USA
"Out of phase" means half a wavelength away. It is impossible to say that a complex audio signal has any one wavelength, because, unless it is just a pure boring unchanging sine wave, it has many wavelengths.
Wavelength of electromagnetic radiation at a typical audio frequency of 1000 Hz would be c/f = 3*10^5 meters, so to get out of phase at at this frequency, you would have to go from Nacogdches to Natchitoches.
Wavelength of electromagnetic radiation at a typical audio frequency of 1000 Hz would be c/f = 3*10^5 meters, so to get out of phase at at this frequency, you would have to go from Nacogdches to Natchitoches.
-
jim milewski
- Posts: 951
- Joined: 18 Nov 1998 1:01 am
- Location: stowe, vermont
-
Michael Johnstone
- Posts: 3862
- Joined: 29 Oct 1998 1:01 am
- Location: Sylmar,Ca. USA
Aren't the pickups on Stringmasters wired like that? Aren't they really just humbuckers with the reverse wound coils seperated by 2 inches? And I thought I heard of a single coil pickup Bill Lawrence was offering briefly that had a 2nd reverse wound coil wired to it but mounted seperately somewhere else on the guitar.
-MJ-
-MJ-
-
William Peters
- Posts: 349
- Joined: 28 Jan 2003 1:01 am
- Location: Effort, Pennsylvania, USA
Not only are the 2 coils reversed on a humbucker, but the magnets also have to be reversed. That is, all the North poles up on one coil, and all the South poles up on the other. If you take two single coil pickups, mount them side by side, and wire them up out of phase, the string signal will also be canceled out along with the hum UNLESS the magnets are reversed on one of the pickups.
Bill
Bill
-
Ricky Davis
- Posts: 11484
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Bertram, Texas USA
-
Paul Brainard
- Posts: 654
- Joined: 6 Feb 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Portland OR
So you'd have to have one of the pickups built for the purpose of wiring them like this. . .
I had talked briefly with Jerry Wallace about the concept of adding a second hum-cancelling coil but didn't know it had been tried - I wonder how well it worked for Bill Lawrence?
How 'bout this idea - if EMI or whatever electrical hum we hear is an environmental factor, in the airwaves or electrical circuit, it seems like it should be possible to add an inverse/cancelling signal to the environment & clean it up?? I have done this in the studio with combination sampler/signal generator with some success, and ProTools has a plug-in ("Ray-Gun") that does the same kind of thing, but wouldn't it be handy to have a gadget you could plug into your rig (signal path or power supply?) that would read the background noise, invert it, and add that in to clean things up? I suppose it probably already exists. The drawback is that you end up losing those frequencies from your tone as well.
The best solution would be a pickup that you could switch from single-coil to humbucker and that would sound good in both configurations (I've tried the George L 5-1, but it wasn't for me. . .)
I had talked briefly with Jerry Wallace about the concept of adding a second hum-cancelling coil but didn't know it had been tried - I wonder how well it worked for Bill Lawrence?
How 'bout this idea - if EMI or whatever electrical hum we hear is an environmental factor, in the airwaves or electrical circuit, it seems like it should be possible to add an inverse/cancelling signal to the environment & clean it up?? I have done this in the studio with combination sampler/signal generator with some success, and ProTools has a plug-in ("Ray-Gun") that does the same kind of thing, but wouldn't it be handy to have a gadget you could plug into your rig (signal path or power supply?) that would read the background noise, invert it, and add that in to clean things up? I suppose it probably already exists. The drawback is that you end up losing those frequencies from your tone as well.
The best solution would be a pickup that you could switch from single-coil to humbucker and that would sound good in both configurations (I've tried the George L 5-1, but it wasn't for me. . .)
-
Donny Hinson
- Posts: 21751
- Joined: 16 Feb 1999 1:01 am
- Location: Glen Burnie, Md. U.S.A.
Contrary to popular opinion, even guitars with "humbuckers" will hum a little! Also, be advised that any preamp (steel-driver), or amplified volume pedal, can make the hum problem worse. Notch filters are available if you have a serious problem, and they will put the offending 60hz or 120hz signal down by about 30 db, more than enough to satisfy most people.
A lot of hum problems are also caused by cheap cords, or poorly-shielded volume pedals. Humbucker pickups will do nothing to alleviate those.
A lot of hum problems are also caused by cheap cords, or poorly-shielded volume pedals. Humbucker pickups will do nothing to alleviate those.
-
Michael Johnstone
- Posts: 3862
- Joined: 29 Oct 1998 1:01 am
- Location: Sylmar,Ca. USA
-
Earnest Bovine
- Posts: 8364
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Los Angeles CA USA
What could possibly be the theory behind that?<SMALL>putting a 100 watt 1 amp diode across the output of a single coil pickup would get rid of hum</SMALL>
And what is a "100 watt" diode? The only ratings I can imagine for a diode are the max current downstream before it fries, and the voltage that will break it down upstream.
-
J Fletcher
- Posts: 1280
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: London,Ont,Canada
I seem to remember that Alembic (?) guitars had a dummy coil in them just for the purpose of reducing single coil hum. Don't know how it was wired, as these guitars usually had active electronics, but I'd guess it was reverse polarity to the other pickups, and then the output of this coil was blended in to the other pickups' signal until the hum was minimized as much as possible. Don't know if there were any magnets with this dummy coil....Jerry
-
Michael Johnstone
- Posts: 3862
- Joined: 29 Oct 1998 1:01 am
- Location: Sylmar,Ca. USA
I haven't really thought it thru on a theoretical level - I'm just repeating what John Fry told me and he generally knows what he's talking about.I wrote down what he said and figured I'd try it when I get around to it. I've tried an inline hi-pass filter and it just destroys the tone of a single coil but I carry it in my pack-a-seat for those gigs where 50% of what's coming out of your amp is hum. -MJ-
-
Earnest Bovine
- Posts: 8364
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Los Angeles CA USA
If the hum is 60 Hz and multiples of 60 Hz, then it seems to me that you could get rid of hum by delaying the signal exactly half a cycle (1/120 second) and inverting it, then combining that with the original signal at exactly the same amplitude.
Of course you would be in trouble if you wanted to hear a multiple of 60 Hz, so avoid playing those notes!
Of course you would be in trouble if you wanted to hear a multiple of 60 Hz, so avoid playing those notes!
-
Bob Hoffnar
- Posts: 9477
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Austin, Tx
-
Jim Bob Sedgwick
- Posts: 2155
- Joined: 23 Jan 1999 1:01 am
- Location: Clinton, Missouri USA
Bob I own a Williams. I have had humbuck pickups and single coils both on the guitar. There's only about a 10% difference in hum between them. I prefer the single coil myself. I have done quite a bit of recording with the single coils and never had a complaint from any of the engineers I have worked with.