Ok. Today I pulled out an old POS j90 that was beat to hell and replaced it with a fairly new j90c. For the hell of it I decided to take the old j90 apart to get a look at the internals of Jackson's pickups. I noticed the inner pickup and the mount are coated in wax. Did Jackson do this so the pickup would resist corrosion or is there some other reason? I've never pulled any other pickups apart to compare it to. Is this something other manufacturers do also? Visually looking at my Duncans I can't see any wax coating on the wire wraps. Kind of a stupid question, but I was just curious if anyone knew the answer.
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Waxy Jackson pickup
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Re: Waxy Jackson pickup
Yeah, that's the cheap way to get rid of microphonics. A properly hand-wound pickup doesn't need potting, and it stays musical.
There are some good potted pickups, so no offense to the Potters [img]/images/graemlins/laugh.gif[/img]
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Re: Waxy Jackson pickup
All pickups are "potted" one way or another. Some (like Fender) use a varnish type material (similar to red Gliptone). It isn't as good as wax and the reason they use it is its cheaper and faster to apply. Using a combination of beeswax and regular wax is the proven method. You are correct in thinking that a correctly wound pickup doesn't need to be potted but you would have to be EXTREMELY carefull not to bang the guitar around at all. Even the slightest jarring of an unpotted pickup can cause the coil windings to shift or loosen thus creating a microphonic (squealing) pickup.
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