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Pickup winder from Down Under

With Kevin O'Brien of Victoria, Australia








Kevin O'Brien credits Gary Brawer and Lindy Fralin for inspiring him to build the pickup winder you see here. Says Kevin: "This machine, for all its peculiarity, winds beautifully with lots of control, and the gentle torque reminiscent of an old steam engine."

A footbrake (left pedal) can slow, or stop instantly, the treadle-operated flywheel (right pedal) without breaking the wire. Note the adjustable hand rest (black walnut), and mechanical counter. The white acrylic back screen is an "eyesaver," and the vertical nylon fingers are "limiters" to keep the hand-traversed wire on course.

The thin drilled wooden plates on top of the machine are used as spacers when Kevin mounts the bobbin holder (thick wood blocks w/beveled edges in the photos) for winding. "If I add a spacer and mount the bobbin's top plate to the bobbin holder," writes Kevin, "I get a clockwise wind. If I mount the bobbin's bottom plate to the bobbin holder without the spacer, I get a counterclockwise wind. The spacer's only purpose is to compensate for the projecting magnets at the top plate and hold them captive. A center screw holds everything in place, and a catchplate on the side of the bobbin holder grabs the bobbin and stops it from free-spinning."

  Next: Magnet polarity
"How many times have you wired a pickup and found that it's magnetically out of phase, even though the white and black leads looked right?" Jim Rolph, of J.M. Rolph Pickups introduced us to the benefits of a magnet polarity tester.






Bobbin Flatwork Material
Bobbin Flatwork Material

Brass Pickup Eyelets
Brass Pickup Eyelets

Pickup Coil Wire
Pickup Coil Wire

Humbucker Pickup Parts
Humbucker Pickup Parts

Single-coil Pickup Parts
Single-coil Pickup Parts

Schatten Pickup Winder
Schatten Pickup Winder


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