I like the look and sound of the Stimer pickup, but I'll be damned if I spend $300 on one. It sounds good, but no pickup sounds $300 good. I do look how it looks though, with the kind of chrome finish, with the volume knob, the clip on the bottom, etc. I was wondering does anyone have any idea what would be a good casing for it? I was looking at some cigarette cases and I can't find one in the right size.
Basically I want to take a normal electric pickup and fit it in there with a volume knob.
Any ideas?
Comments
http://shoppingcart.djangobooks.com/eco ... ckups.html
Just using a standard electric guitar pickup won't really work on a Gypsy guitar because the strings are made of silvered copper so the balance will be off. The pickup has to be wound so it will compensate for this or you'd have to string your Gypsy guitar with nickel strings.
-Michael
I had plans to build one from scratch just never got round to it - maybe later this summer. One major obstacle is the legendary low out put of the G string in particular. I have one of Duponts reissue Stimers and even though it's supposed to be wound in such a way to counteract this problem it doesnt do it very well.
Unless you use some kind of adjusting mechanism - a screw ( as in most humbuckers ) or a slug ( as in some Strats ) - you'll probably always get an imbalance. My plan was to have a specially shaped magnet with a raised section under the G string as I can't for the life of me see how you can adjust the actual winding.
The Krivo buckers look good and If it wasnt for import tax I'd buy one
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GMhz_0Rs9Qw
Ithink a compressor pedal will help even it out if that is the case though.
The G string weakness has been well documented in this forum on numerous occasions with a number of solutions proposed including a compressor, an eq pedal, a plain G string or - the john jorgenson method - just live with it.
1) He's probably using nickel strings which you wouldn't want to do unless you only play the guitar as an electric.
2) As a listener you don't notice the balance problem that much, but as a player it can drive you nuts. You'll see what I mean if you try to do this...
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It does work pretty well if you have low action and 11 gauge strings....if you mount it on your average Asian guitar then usually the action is a lot higher than a Dupont which will exaggerate the imbalance between the strings. On Duponts it works very well...
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Last night I fitted an Artec soundhole pickup with adjustable pole pieces to my Anastasio which has a round hole and it worked a treat. Sounded a bit more acoustic than the the Stimer but you could still push a valve amp into a bit of grunginess.
Alan