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Jochen

Member
Joined
Jul 8, 2004
Messages
5
Is one of the singlecoils on the 'old' Morse RWRP? If so, which?

Thanks for your help!
Jochen
 

Jochen

Member
Joined
Jul 8, 2004
Messages
5
It's Reverse Wound Reverse Polarity. I think it's quite normal for strat middle pickups to get this 'airy' sound. I think about changing the singles on my Morse and I would like to know which one of them, if any, should be 'RWRP'.

Jochen
 

tommyindelaware

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 24, 2002
Messages
3,274
Location
wilmington , delaware
Jochen said:
It's Reverse Wound Reverse Polarity. I think it's quite normal for strat middle pickups to get this 'airy' sound. I think about changing the singles on my Morse and I would like to know which one of them, if any, should be 'RWRP'.

Jochen

there is no industry standard for polarity .it can vary from brand to brand. if u are replacing both single coils......then the polarity of the pickups in there now is not important.u just wanna be sure to get a new set that does contain one rwrp. i'd stay with one manufacturer to be safe as far as polarity goes. there are ALOT of really good pickups being made these days.some of them are even as good as the ones that are already in there.(there is also a whole lot of stupid redundent bull**** voodoo ones) i've swapped them out in dozens of standard morse guitars........& more often than not my customers end up putting back the originals. in my opinion there are very few...if any...... that are better.:)
for versitility........ that standard morse geetar rules !!!!!!
 
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beej

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Aug 16, 2004
Messages
12,315
Location
Toronto, Canada
Jochen said:
It's Reverse Wound Reverse Polarity. I think it's quite normal for strat middle pickups to get this 'airy' sound.

That's not what gets you the 'quack' or 'airy' sound - you get that by having two single coils wired in parallel, at a short distance from each other.

Middle pickups are reverse wound (relative to the other pickups in the guitar) for the noise-cancelling properties, so that when wired up the hum from each is subtracted. Same principle applies to humbuckers except that they're usually wired in series and not parallel.

+1 on what everybody has said on the Morse singles- they sound fantastic. You can also get a nice plucky sound with the two single coils together. (However there is some hum there.)
 
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