I've never had a chance to play through them. Are they even brighter than mini-humbuckers as a general rule? Or does the full metal cover actually dull out some treble?
Hang on.....maybe I've misunderstood inductance, but I always thought that was the capacity to produce a signal. So a stronger magnet (or magnetic field) in the same wind would mean more inductance hence a greater output for the same turn count.A FB PU has 2 bar magnets IN its coils, hence a stronger magnetism, less inductance
What I'm specifically talking about is why you said a stronger magnetic field will mean less inductance.
So to make sure I'm visualizing this correctly:
- a mini HB has a traditional position would coil, ferrous adjustable screw type poles, and a bar magnet across the bottom - much like a modern bar magnet Fender single coil but with adjustable pole pieces (and dual coils, of course).
- an early FB pickup has a bar magnet in the center of the coil(s) where the individual pole pieces would be, but in bar format
- a later (?) FB pickup has the coil(s) turned at 90 degrees to the norm with a bar magnet in the core... like taking the early FBpickup and turning the coils on their sides.
Let me know if I have that much right, and I'll add some more questions.
The same absence of correlation can be noticed when we swap AlNi(Co) bars in a standard HB: A5 will give the strongest magnetic field and A3 the weakest, with A4 and A2 in between. Conversely, the inductance of the PU will be the highest with AlNi 3 and the lowest with AlNiCo 5, because A3 contains something like 11% more iron.
What's confusing me is the statement above: "Conversely, the inductance of the PU will be the highest with AlNi 3 and the lowest with AlNiCo 5, because A3 contains something like 11% more iron.". My weak understanding of traditional magnets (A5 has more output than A3) tells me the A5 pickup has stronger output.
But, if inductance is higher with A3, and output is lower, my understandings are at odds. Does higher inductance result in lower output?