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Single-coil Pickup Kits
Assembly instructions for Strat and Tele-style pickups
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i-5967
Updated 05/08
Prepare the flatwork
Smooth, and slightly round the edges of the fiber flatwork with very fine sandpaper to remove any roughness that might catch the thin wire during winding. On the bottom piece, countersink the underside of the hole, to better fit the eyelet and allow it to expand and grip more securely. Insert the eyelet into the underside of the flatwork. The small end of the eyelet will be facing up for setting.
Setting the eyelet curls and spreads the brass tube, creating a flange that grips the flatwork. Before setting, back up the eyelet with a solid surface such as aluminum or steel. (Wood is too soft to provide a proper backup.)
We highly recommend the #5976 Eyelet Setting Tool for a clean, consistant installation.
Install the polepieces
Strat: The polepieces are in three lengths. The two longest pieces are for the D and G strings, and the shortest is for the B string. The remaining three are the same length, and they are for the E, A, E strings.
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Tele bridge: The polepieces are in two lengths. The two longest pieces are for the D and G strings, and the remaining four are the same length, and they are for the E, A, B, and E strings.
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Tele neck: The polepieces are the same length.
To hold the polepieces upright while installing them, make a small jig with a hole just larger than the polepieces. Drill a 19/64" hole through a short length of hardwood or acrylic, 1/4" thick x 3/8" wide. An accurately drilled hole will hold the polepieces squarely and keep your fingers out of the way when pressing or tapping the pieces into the flatwork.
Option 1: Using a small hammer (one with a plastic or brass head is the most gentle), firmly tap in the magnets while the flatwork rests on a support block placed on a very solid, flat surface.
Option 2: Press the polepieces into the flatwork using a drill press. Close the jaws in the drill press chuck and use the flat underside of the chuck as an overhead press.
The thickness of the eyelets in the bottom flatwork will keep it from laying flush to the work surface, so let them hang over the edge of a support block during installation. For Strat and Tele bridge pickups, install the shorter polepieces first and the longer pair last, so that youre not trying to hammer a shorter piece while hitting a taller one thats already installed.
Once theyre installed, make sure the polepieces are square to the flatwork and parallel with each other. If theyre not, or if the flatwork is warping, manipulate the pieces until the poles are squarely seated and the fiber pieces are flat.
Install the top flatwork
Pieces of hardwood placed on each side of the polepieces will serve as spacers to make sure the top flatwork is at the right height, leaving a gap of 7/16"-15/32" for the wire. Cut two pieces measuring 2-1/2" x 7/16" x 1/8". For Tele pickups, cut two pieces measuring 2-1/2" x 15/32" x 1/8". Use a rubber band to hold them in place beside the polepieces (photo).

The holes in the top piece are tighter than the bottom holes. The fiber will press over the magnets, but not as easily the sharp edges of the magnets will punch out a small amount of fiber as the top flatwork is pressed on.
Option 1: Tap the top piece on with your hammer, using the polepiece-holder you made as a caul to protect the flatwork as shown in the photo.
Option 2: The drill press can be used again to provide downward pressure. A small socket wrench or similar shape held in the drill press chuck can provide a caul to press the flatwork onto the polepieces.
Start on the two tallest polepieces first (D-G). Alternate between them, applying pressure (or tapping) until the flatwork is started over both pieces. Again, the flatwork may warp out of shape slightly keep this to a minimum by frequently alternating, pressing or tapping each hole equally.
As the D-G poles start to come through the top of the flatwork, your polepiece-holder will become helpful in tapping the flatwork down.
When all the magnets have started through the holes, be sure to have your two wooden spacers in place. The top flatwork is installed when it is flush against these two spacers. The spacers should be snug when youre finished, but will pull out with little trouble.
Choose your wire
Fender used both 42AWG (American Wire Gauge) and 43AWG coil wire for their pickups. Stratocaster pickups were all wound with 42AWG, while Tele neck pickups were all wound with 43AWG. The very earliest Broadcaster and Telecaster bridge pickups used 43AWG, but switched to 42AWG sometime in the early fifties.
Wind the coil
There are lots of ways to wind a pickup. Virtually anything that spins with a controllable speed could be rigged to do the job. Your winder could be built from a simple hand drill (although it would have no way to count the number of winds) or you could use the more advanced #1465 Schatten Pickup Winder, with its digital counter and speed control.
The number of winds, the coil wire tension, and the way in which you build up the layers of wire all affect the tone of your pickup. Dont make the winds too tight, or you could cause the pickup to deform from the pressure. If your winds are too loose, you could have problems with excessive feedback. Pickups from the 50s and early 60s were wound clockwise (when viewed from the top of the pickup) with approximately 8000 turns of wire. If you dont have a counter, you can start by looking at another pickup and visually matching the size of its coil.
Attach the pickup to your winder. Depending on the winder, this might mean using double-stick tape (carpet installation tape is strong) or another fastener. You want the pickup carefully centered on and square to the winding shaft. If your winder has a flat pickup mounting plate, the metal eyelets on the underside of the pickup will keep the flatwork from sitting flat on the surface. Multiple layers of double-stick tape can shim it up while holding it, or you may want to file a groove into the mounting plate to accommodate the thickness of the eyelets.
In our example photos, weve used a homemade winder: an electric drill clamped to a workbench. The speed control is simply a second clamp which is tightened onto the drill trigger: screwing it down tighter presses the trigger and speeds up the drill. Its easier and more accurate to use the Schatten Pickup Winder, but we wanted to demonstrate that your first pickups can be wound with very simple gear.


TIP: Wrap a bit of uncoated wire around the metal eyelet on the bass side, then cover the eyelets with smooth tape, to prevent snagging while winding.

We fashioned a mounting plate in the shape of the pickup (with a recess for the eyelets), and mounted that onto a metal shaft thats held in the drill chuck. Whatever your method, see that the pickup is spinning true and straight.
Youll be moving the wire back and forth as it feeds onto the coil, and youll want to create a traverse limiter to keep it between the two flatwork pieces. On the Schatten Winder, this is a polished metal rod with adjustable right and left limiters. For our simple winder, the limiter is a hole drilled in a piece of wood that pivots right and left. The hole must be sanded very smooth.
Attach the wire to the pickup. Pickup coil wire has a thin clear coating that acts as an electrical insulator. Use very fine sandpaper to gently sand off this covering from an inch or so at the end of the wire. Wrap this uncoated bit of wire around the metal eyelet on the bass side of the pickup (see illustration). Dont sand the wire running from the eyelet to the polepieces that part should still be insulated.
If you have a winder with a counter, set it to zero. Start the first 6-10 wraps turning the drill winder by hand to insure that the coil wire wont be pulled off of the bobbin when you start the winding. Watch out for the metal eyelets: they can snag coil wire and break it. A little bit of cellophane tape along the edge with the eyelets can help guide the wire up and over the eyelets.
Coil wire is thin and easy to break! Control your winding pressure, and the drag on the wire, by folding a piece of felt over the wire as you hold it. Talcum powder on your hand is another way to keep a light hold on the wire without sticking. If you break the wire you can choose to start over or you can sand the insulation off the wire ends and solder them back together.
When youre done winding, cut the coil wire leaving enough to reach the eyelets with at least 2" to spare. Sand the coating from the end of the wire and wrap it through the treble-side eyelet. The start and finish ends leading to the eyelets should be snug and flat against the bottom flatwork.
Soldering the lead wires
Strat pickups: From the underside of the pickup, feed the black and white hookup wires through the center hole between the eyelets. The black wire will be soldered to the start of the coil wire and the white is for the finish. Expose (push-back the covering) approximately 3/16" of the lead wires and carefully feed them down into the eyelets on the bottom of the pickup, solder each wire to its eyelet and coil wire.

Tele bridge pickups: From the underside of the pickup, feed the black and white hookup wires through the center hole between the eyelets. Expose (push-back the covering) 3/16" of the white wire and 1/2" of the black wire (you may need to use wire stripers rather than simply pushing back the black wires covering to expose 1/2" or wire), then carefully feed them down into the eyelets on the bottom of the pickup. Solder each wire to its eyelet and coil wire the black wire will be soldered to the start of the coil wire and the white is for the finish. The extra length of exposed black should extend below the pickup and is used to solder to the bridge pickups baseplate. Once the leads are soldered to the eyelets, solder the extra length of black wire to the bottom of the copper plate.
Traditionally the copper-plated steel plate isnt attached to the bottom flatwork other than by the magnets and in the pickup potting process where the wax will hold it in place. To reduce the chance of microphonic feedback, the plate can be glued to the bottom flatwork using silicone caulking run a small bead of caulk along the bottom of the polepieces and clamp the plate to the pickup. After the caulk cures, the pickup is ready to be wrapped with string.

The white string is wrapped around the coil to protect the delicate windings. You may want to test the pickup with your volt/ohm meter before wrapping the pickup (see Test the DC resistance). To wrap the pickup, lay about 1/2" of the end of the string on the side of the coil. Carefully wind the string around the coil so that the windings completely cover the coil wire. The end of the string can be tucked beside the last few windings of string and the flatwork. This will hold the string in place until the pickup gets potted.
Tele neck pickups: From the underside of the pickup, feed the black and white hookup wires through the center hole between the eyelets. Expose (push-back the covering) 3/16" of the white wire and 1/2" of the black wire (you may need to use wire strippers rather than simply pushing back the black wires covering to expose 1/2" of wire), then carefully feed them down into the eyelets on the bottom of the pickup. Solder each wire to its eyelet and coil wire the black wire will be soldered to the start of the coil wire and the white is for the finish. The extra length of exposed black should extend below the pickup and is used to solder to the neck pickups cover.

You may wish to test your pickup prior to soldering the cover in place (see Test the DC resistance). To install the cover, first use a file or sandpaper to remove the plating on the center tab this will allow it to take the solder better. Carefully slide the cover over the top of the pickup, making sure that the center tab slides in the hole where the two lead wires come up through the bottom flatwork. Press the cover down flush with the flatwork be careful not to damage the two fine coil wires leading from the eyelets to the coil. With the cover in place, use a flat tool such as a blade screwdriver to bend the two outside tabs under the flatwork. The center tab isnt bent down, instead, solder the extra length of black lead wire to the center tab.
Test the DC resistance
Test with a volt/ohm meter set to the 20K range. A Strat pickup should be about 5.75K-6.75K. If you get an open circuit: are your connections to the coil wire good? Did you solder a break inside the coil which is now causing a short?
Charge the magnets
The polepieces are now ready to be magnetized by passing them between two strong magnets held apart with just enough room to pass the pickup between.
Option 1: Make a simple fixture using a 5" soundhole clamp. Remove the feet with a screwdriver and attach two of our 1" diameter Guitar Repair Magnets with #20 Super Glue. Orient the magnets so that they pull toward each other, and adjust the magnets so they are 1" apart. Identify and mark the north/south polarity for reference.

Fender Strat pickups were always "north up" until 1960 when they became south up. Use our #5127 Magnet Polarity Tester to determine a magnet's polarity.
Option 2: For an adjustable-width magnetizing fixture, our Nut and Saddle Vise #1816 works well. Since the jaws are steel, the Guitar Repair Magnets hold themselves in place without glue. This lets you adjust for different pickups and different proximity by simply opening and closing the vise.

The Guitar Repair Magnets will charge the Alnico V magnets to their full capacity of 20-25 Gauss. Several passes through the magnets does the job; move the pickup as slowly as you can while keeping it free of the magnets. To determine a magnets strength, we recommend the analog Model 25 Magnetometer (50-0-50 gauss range) available from the R.B. Annis Company. It works well and is reasonably priced.
Pickup potting
Potting a pickup (dipping it in melted wax or other material) helps eliminate unwanted microphonics and feedback. Although early Fender pickups werent potted, pottings generally a good idea. Refer to our instruction sheet #i-1465, Winding Pickups with the Schatten Pickup Winder for information on potting materials and techniques. Its free, and you can download it from our website at www.stewmac.com/freeinfo.
Tools, supplies, and resources
#5127 Magnet Polarity Tester
#4638 Guitar Repair Magnets
#1465 Schatten Pickup Winder
#1462 42AWG Pickup Coil Wire
#1463 43AWG Pickup Coil Wire
www.stewmac.com/pickups
www.stewmac.com/freeinfo
Strat® and Tele® are registered trademarks of Fender Musical Instruments Corporation.



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Parts Kit for Strat Pickup

Parts Kit for Tele Neck Pickup

Parts Kit for Tele Bridge Pickup

Strat Pickup Flatwork

Schatten Pickup Winder

Pickup Coil Wire

Pickup Coil Tape

Magnet Polarity Tester

Guitar Repair Magnets

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