Replies

  • I believe Jim is simply looking for info to measure the resistance of the pickup. Set the meter on ohms (the upsidedown U symbol). Touch one probe to each wire of the pickup. It doesn't matter which probe is touching which wire.

    Jim you probably mean 5.85 k ohms, not ohms. K means 1000. 5.85 k ohms would be the same as 5850 ohms. Anyway, that measurement sounds about right for a Strat pickup.

    Skeesix
    --
    http://skeesixcbgs.com/
    Making your cigar box guitar rock!
  • David VanVranken said:
    Anyway, from what I gather, CBG isn't about precision, it's about improvisation. Best way to test is to hook it up and see what it sounds like.

    TA DA!!!! We have a winner! I agree!
  • Back to the subject: A cheap multimeter may not help much. You're talking millivolts, plus varying frequencies. Most AC meters are calibrated for one frequency only and aren't sensitive enough anyway to give you any kind of good reading.

    The best you can hope for is to find an RMS meter (Root-Mean-Square) which gives a better average over all frequencies. To do it right you have to put it into a load (hook it to your amp) with a steady input signal (not strumming or tapping) and measure across the input leads. Not exactly cheapo meter kind of stuff.

    Sorry

    Anyway, from what I gather, CBG isn't about precision, it's about improvisation. Best way to test is to hook it up and see what it sounds like.
  • "But these go to 11" :>)

    Jkevn said:
    Plug CBG in question up to your favorite amp, place ALL knobs at the #10 position, strum strings of said guitar...

    If a big cheesy grin forms under your nose..tada! Output has been Measured!
  • Jim138 said:
    ??

    Tres Seaver said:
    Horsepower, of course :)

    My pickup when I was growing up had a 150 horsepower engine. ;)
  • Plug CBG in question up to your favorite amp, place ALL knobs at the #10 position, strum strings of said guitar...

    If a big cheesy grin forms under your nose..tada! Output has been Measured!
  • ??

    Tres Seaver said:
    Horsepower, of course :)
  • Horsepower, of course :)
  • I am getting 5.85 Ohms I think that is about right for a standard Strat neck pickup.
  • set meter to use the lowest AC voltage range.
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