Who Invented The Humbucker?, Early Electric Guitar Iceberg, Gibson, National, Rickenbacker, Gretsch

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 21 дек 2024

Комментарии • 105

  • @K5HJ
    @K5HJ 4 месяца назад +12

    FYI, the resistance of the coils is not what makes them work. It is merely a DC measurement of resistance of the length of wire vs. the wire gauge. The inductance of the coil is what makes them pick up the changes in magnetic field as the strings react with the magnets. Smaller gauge wire has a higher resistance per foot. The smaller the wire gauge, the greater the number of turns that will fit in the available space. More turns, more inductance.

    • @Notaluthier
      @Notaluthier  4 месяца назад +4

      Correction to my ignorance!

    • @Earthstein
      @Earthstein 4 месяца назад

      Excellent. You are assuming pure copper wire, of course? Your''s is a good example of how easy it was for even first year electric technicians understood the relationships. But it took Led Zeppelin (among others) to bring the beauty and fun of American Black Blues music to the masses. Gibson and Seth Lover are Led Zeppelin.

  • @betterl8thannvr
    @betterl8thannvr 4 месяца назад +45

    They should have collaborated on the Butts Lover pickup

    • @ManuelKellermann
      @ManuelKellermann 4 месяца назад +1

      You just made my day! 🤣

    • @paulpennington-mv7rt
      @paulpennington-mv7rt 4 месяца назад +1

      Oh God that was way too easy 🎉😂😂😂

    • @blodpudding
      @blodpudding 4 месяца назад +2

      Tootmark and Butts is a match made in heaven

    • @r0flgal0re
      @r0flgal0re 4 месяца назад +1

      Butt's Tootmark? I don't know if I want one of those... xD

    • @jlore6344
      @jlore6344 4 месяца назад

      OMG, it had not occurred to me but now I can think of nothing that makes more sense in the world!!! LOL!! Good one.

  • @markdoyle9642
    @markdoyle9642 4 месяца назад +6

    VERY, VERY WELL DONE SIR! I am an old retired biophysicist... from a family known for tearing apart perfectly good guitars to make them better! These early guitar and amplifier designs carry the Simple Science of Sustainable Energy! I have a collection of historic, and folkloric Low Impedance floating coil innovation for teaching electromagnetism from 5th graders, to medical students... I don't know who invented 5th graders, but they deserve an Award. I intended to make a video similar to yours but You NAILED the Physics (Pun). I have several unusual 1960's European/ Russia / Georgia guitars with split coils between strings 1-3 and 4-6 . I am old and terrible with Social Media. Let me know if I can share my guitar inventory. Thank You, RESPECT!.

    • @Notaluthier
      @Notaluthier  4 месяца назад

      That sounds very cool! I only have one NOS Soviet pickup, and it has a very different magnet layout than anything else. I’d be interested to see what you have!

    • @markdoyle9642
      @markdoyle9642 4 месяца назад

      @@Notaluthier Absolutely! I will find you and share the Awesome Innovation in my shop. Now that I am retired I can spend much more time with music innovation. Of course my -69 Gibson Les Paul Personal. Professional, Recording and L-5 S with Low Impedence pickups are Amazing in that You can dial in passive settings to sound Exactly like an Acoustic guitar! I haven'tupdated my YT Channel in over a decade, but this is Me
      ruclips.net/video/1kKxCmRlVRg/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/KB5kmdN337Y/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/_Gk5ma94e9s/видео.html

  • @joseislanio8910
    @joseislanio8910 4 месяца назад +4

    I had no idea the filtertron used a different wire gauge, but that makes total sense, as it's strong enough for such a small resistance. Subbed!

  • @matthewf1979
    @matthewf1979 4 месяца назад +3

    Wonderful collection of vintage pickups. I am quite jealous!

  • @chadwilliams8583
    @chadwilliams8583 4 месяца назад +3

    This has became our best channel we watch for all things guitar,wires and wood very quickly and I couldn't be more happy God Bless and Godspeed

  • @lancelucifer4851
    @lancelucifer4851 4 месяца назад +3

    Man this is a gem of a video. Thanks, love the history.

  • @picksalot1
    @picksalot1 4 месяца назад +2

    This is easily the most interesting video I've seen on the history of Pickups. Great that you're shining a light on the history before Butts and Lover. I'll have to check out more of your videos. Thanks!

  • @henryhunter5026
    @henryhunter5026 4 месяца назад +3

    Thanks for an excellent video. I thought that I knew all about the history of the electric guitar pickup but it seems that there’s a lot I don’t know.

    • @Notaluthier
      @Notaluthier  4 месяца назад +1

      And I only scratched the surface!

  • @bensharp4164
    @bensharp4164 4 месяца назад +3

    Hey man! I have a mint copy of Practical Mechanics from March 1943 with a guide to building your own pick up, I'd be happy to send over some photos. Thanks for another great video. All the best from across the pond :)

    • @Notaluthier
      @Notaluthier  4 месяца назад +2

      Coool! I’d be interested to see that for sure

  • @guitfidle
    @guitfidle 4 месяца назад +2

    Man, you have got some pretty sweet gear there! I really need to get my '40s Vega amp running so I can try this kind of thing.... although I don't have many vintage electric instruments.

  • @brettbunke9096
    @brettbunke9096 4 месяца назад +4

    That was a great video man❤

  • @chazstewart4865
    @chazstewart4865 4 месяца назад +2

    Entertaining AND educational.... what a treat to see these old pickups...

  • @lukespread
    @lukespread Месяц назад +1

    A most excellent video ruined by a complete lack of Buggy. Damn. Very informative, regardless.

    • @Notaluthier
      @Notaluthier  Месяц назад

      What an oversight! 🐕🐕🐕🐕🐕🐕

  • @jlore6344
    @jlore6344 4 месяца назад +2

    This was a lot of fun, thanks for doing that research and for producing this report. The amp also sounds amazing from here and that Supro acoustic/electric is beautiful.

  • @TheKruizr
    @TheKruizr 4 месяца назад +2

    Awesome video! I've always been very interested in the history of pickups! 😊👍

  • @that_thing_I_do
    @that_thing_I_do 4 месяца назад +2

    Hey!....you found my pick! Enjoyed the vid. Informative.

  • @jebjohn7934
    @jebjohn7934 4 месяца назад +37

    I invented it

    • @paulpennington-mv7rt
      @paulpennington-mv7rt 4 месяца назад +2

      No you didn't !
      I didn't.

    • @jebjohn7934
      @jebjohn7934 4 месяца назад +2

      @@paulpennington-mv7rt I’ll sue

    • @paulpennington-mv7rt
      @paulpennington-mv7rt 4 месяца назад

      @@jebjohn7934 Like,
      A boy named sue ?
      Go ahead... 'they' are morally, financially, bankrupt.

    • @ErickvdK
      @ErickvdK 4 месяца назад

      ​@@jebjohn7934He did, so you can't!

    • @danton8302
      @danton8302 4 месяца назад

      No! I did!

  • @BockwinkleB
    @BockwinkleB 2 месяца назад +2

    8:45 Throwing shade the lamp builder's way.

  • @SeamusJohnsonMusic
    @SeamusJohnsonMusic 4 месяца назад +2

    Love your videos! East coster, love the Methstang and the Gibson J-50 that came from here!

  • @Goomer
    @Goomer 4 месяца назад +2

    I have a 7 string Richenbacher lap steel and matching amp that I never use. Also have a "Rex" Americana, hollowbody, red, white blue theme. I think someone told me the Company was owned by Gretsch for a budget line of guitars. What a great collection of pups you have. I wanted hear the "Roger".

    • @Notaluthier
      @Notaluthier  4 месяца назад

      The Roger looks identical to a Hofner pickup of the era. But I have yet to hear either in action!

  • @trappenweisseguy27
    @trappenweisseguy27 4 месяца назад +1

    Subbed, awesome video man. You dove waaay down into the deep end of early pickup technology. I have and recommend the book “The Guitar Pickups Handbook” from Dave Hunter if you don’t already have it.

    • @Notaluthier
      @Notaluthier  4 месяца назад

      Oh cool! I haven’t heard of it, I’ll look into that! Thanks

  • @ariholder4762
    @ariholder4762 4 месяца назад +3

    Fun fact in Aotearoa NZ our mains power is 50Hz so I've never heard the famed 60 cycle hum. I imagination its fairly similar.

    • @matthewf1979
      @matthewf1979 4 месяца назад +1

      It’s just 10 more buzzzhertz a second than what you hear. Very small difference, but still noticeable.

  • @GuttlinGuitars
    @GuttlinGuitars 4 месяца назад +3

    super interesting!!

  • @TehGav
    @TehGav 4 месяца назад +2

    My 1936 Slingerland electric has a six-coil pickup (one under each string) that's wired as a humbucker.

    • @Notaluthier
      @Notaluthier  4 месяца назад +1

      Oooh! I’ve always wanted to check out the Slingerland pickup. Is yours a lap steel, Spanish, or archtop? My maybell has the ubiquitous Chicago pickup instead of the Slingerland one.

    • @TehGav
      @TehGav 4 месяца назад

      @@Notaluthier It's the Songster 401 Spanish. The pickup is genuinely ferocious -- like the nitro-burning dragster of '30s guitar pickups.
      I did a lot of research to find out where that pickup design came from. It's featured in a British radio magazine circa 1935, then the trail goes cold.

  • @bengordon2330
    @bengordon2330 4 месяца назад +1

    thank you for doing the work. Your hair looks great :)

  • @ktk44man
    @ktk44man 4 месяца назад +13

    Seth lover and ray Butts. Seth...ray... Butt...lover...

    • @Notaluthier
      @Notaluthier  4 месяца назад +5

      I knew I missed an opportunity for a butt lover joke! D’oh!

  • @skullheadwater9839
    @skullheadwater9839 4 месяца назад +2

    Is Ray Butz related to Seymour? I was starting to wonder if you were going to plug stuff in, I am a tone chaser and like you try to collect things of this sort. But I am cheap, so I started building tube amps and such several years ago. I like experimenting with different tubes and circuit designs. I think if we were neighbors, we'd be fast friends.

    • @Notaluthier
      @Notaluthier  4 месяца назад +1

      No, but he’s cousins with Amanda Hugandkiss!

  • @FrogCabin-in5wd
    @FrogCabin-in5wd 4 месяца назад +3

    In a similar vein, back in the 1970's the Grateful Dead's sound genius, Owsley, created a dual-microphone setup for the Dead's singers and their outdoor shows to eliminate noise leaking in from the PA system. We're operating at the limits of my comprehension here, so I'll quote a much smarter person on the Web:
    "A major improvement in the quality of the vocal sound is due to the use of differential microphones. Each singer has a perfectly matched pair of Bruel and Kjaer microphones hooked up out of phase, only one of which he sings into. Any sound which goes equally into both microphones is cancelled out when the two signals are added together. Therefore leakage of instruments and background noise into the vocal channel is minimized."

    • @handwriting8804
      @handwriting8804 4 месяца назад

      This had been a common practice long before the Grateful Dead did it

  • @qwerty_studios
    @qwerty_studios 4 месяца назад +1

    i may be misremembering but i heard the log (1939) had stacked humbuckers

  • @rjlchristie
    @rjlchristie 4 месяца назад +1

    0:37 "creates a resistance, which coupled with a magnet picks up the vibrations of the strings which creates a voltage..."
    Nope. Resistance and a magnet won't do anything much. You need an inductive reactance, or impedance.
    That's what a coil creates, it's not a simple resistance.

    • @Notaluthier
      @Notaluthier  4 месяца назад

      Yep, I was dead wrong. I just said what I thought was the case I knew it would probably be inaccurate whoops

  • @LizordSword
    @LizordSword 4 месяца назад +4

    the perfect pickups for metal

  • @peterjames2580
    @peterjames2580 4 месяца назад +1

    Nice class!!!

  • @johnsonkaiden497
    @johnsonkaiden497 4 месяца назад +2

    What do they have against Hum? Stars is an amazing song

  • @jeremyschuhmann9671
    @jeremyschuhmann9671 4 месяца назад

    In your attempt at an explanation of humbucking pickup design, you left out the important fact that not only are the two coils wound in opposite directions to make them opposite phase, the magnets within the coils are also flipped (i.e. one has north pole up while the other has south pole up). The result is that magnetic field disturbances that are local to the magnetic fields of the pickup magnets (i.e. the vibrating steel strings) create signals from the two coils that are IN PHASE (because the reverse wind causes a 180 degree phase shift, and the reversed magnets cause another 180 degree phase shift, which brings them back in phase so that they add). whereas magnetic field disturbances that are remote (i.e. ambient magnetic field “noise” caused by electrical wiring and AC powered devices) are not affected by the local magnetic field of the pickup, and therefore generate signals in the two coils that are 180 degrees out of phase and cancel each other. Another thing you left out is that humbucking coils can be wired in series (like Gibson design), or in parallel (like Gretsch design). The series design gives you a higher impedance and a hotter signal at the expense of some treble loss. The parallel design gives you a lower impedance and a twangier sound.

    • @Notaluthier
      @Notaluthier  4 месяца назад

      Thanks for the info, I referenced opposing “polarity” repeatedly in regards to the magnets. And briefly mentioned that there are 4 possible wiring schemes from a two coil pickup. Two in series and two in parallel. I just ad lib my videos (no script) so there’s bound to be some omissions and errors.

  • @666pinkster
    @666pinkster 4 месяца назад +1

    Probably whoever developed the Western Electric amplifier series for Edison. It's based on the same principle as what's used with an A B amplifier in the phase issues between them to cancel noise So it predates guitar pickups

    • @Notaluthier
      @Notaluthier  4 месяца назад +1

      Yep! I do mention in the video that hum cancelling circuits were long-known in other electronics before the advent of the electric guitar!

    • @666pinkster
      @666pinkster 4 месяца назад +1

      @@Notaluthier that part came after my comment, but, yeppers! cool vid, bro, subbed!

  • @13DKA-kg2fz
    @13DKA-kg2fz 3 месяца назад +1

    We're all standing on the shoulders of giants. I guess many of them may feel pretty relieved about not having all those dwarfs standing on their shoulders, fighting about bragging rights anymore. :)

  • @FACTUALITY-1
    @FACTUALITY-1 4 месяца назад +1

    For those who dont know what AWG means it is "American Wire Gauge".

  • @Evan_Kersey
    @Evan_Kersey 4 месяца назад +3

    12:42 now thats a big pot

    • @Notaluthier
      @Notaluthier  4 месяца назад +1

      I have an ABSURD pot from ~1918, i’m sure it’ll show up in a video eventually

  • @Earthstein
    @Earthstein 4 месяца назад +1

    Seth Lover is generally credited. But since it takes only a basic understanding of physics any pre-grad electronics/Electrical engineer could have designed one on a napkin. I don't doubt many did. Then tossed the napkin.

    • @Notaluthier
      @Notaluthier  4 месяца назад

      Yeah, the video states that neither of these guys were even close to inventing the humbucker

  • @satanbane
    @satanbane 4 месяца назад

    The notion of adding a pickup to an acoustic instrument and playing through an amplifier and headphones in order to be quieter, actually makes plenty of sense. This would allow you to play much more quietly in a physical sense, and still clearly hear your playing. This applies to solid-body electric guitars today, equally. A nice electric will have plenty of resonance so you can certainly practice with it unplugged, but if the noise is bothering someone, then play through headphones, and without even trying you will end up strumming and picking much more quietly.

    • @Notaluthier
      @Notaluthier  4 месяца назад +1

      I stand by my declaration of its absurdity. you can hear an acoustic instrument just fine when playing it quietly. The addition of a very crude homemade hacksaw blade pickup plugged in through…probably an old radio…would likely render equal parts signal from the instrument and hiss/hum/static. 1939 headphones were not good either. I digress. I appreciate the pushback/debate. But in the context of the article/design/era, I don’t think it’s a good/useable idea

  • @martinhiggs7027
    @martinhiggs7027 4 месяца назад +1

    Gretsch invented the side by side humbucker ! the vertical humbucker has been around on lap steels since the late 1930's early 1940's
    "Rickenbacker" Les Paul was working with a hidden coil version (out of phase) somewhere inside the body of the guitar !
    Vi-Vi Tone was also in the game with a electric generator pickup in the very early 1930's

    • @Notaluthier
      @Notaluthier  4 месяца назад

      Though I didn’t mention vivitone, only concentrating on magnetic pickups, if you watch the video you’ll be sure to find out that I don’t think either of those companies came close to inventing the humbucker, in any orientation

  • @bigsbyfreak
    @bigsbyfreak 4 месяца назад +2

    vega was making humbuckers 10 years befor too

  • @AnnoyingCritic-is7rp
    @AnnoyingCritic-is7rp 4 месяца назад +1

    Don't tell anyone. If this ever gets out people will be making their own pickups and guitars.

  • @daleskidmore1685
    @daleskidmore1685 4 месяца назад +1

    The phrase " Re inventing the wheel" comes to mind. Nicely researched talk. PS Is there any truth in the assertion my mate makes that the solid body electric guitar was invented to stop plectrums ( plectra? ) from being lost in the sound holes of acoustic guitars?

    • @Notaluthier
      @Notaluthier  4 месяца назад +3

      Hahahha, no the solid body guitar was invented largely for the purpose of evading feedback. You’ll see many early hollow electrics without soundholes for the same reason.

    • @daleskidmore1685
      @daleskidmore1685 4 месяца назад

      @@Notaluthier I can't wait to put him right!

  • @Guilhem74
    @Guilhem74 4 месяца назад +3

    Mr Humbucker did it, duh

  • @pvdguitars2951
    @pvdguitars2951 Месяц назад +1

    What is invention? Should it not be called discovery? To uncover what has always been?
    Etymology of inventus (Latin) of invenio means to find, to meet, to come upon or to … discover.
    So taking a patent, a claim of ownership of something that has always been is really silly!
    The great Wilhelm Rontgen never took a claim for ‘his’ discovery!!!

    • @Notaluthier
      @Notaluthier  Месяц назад

      I see where you’re going. And it’s an interesting debate. In this case neither invented anything. But whomever discovered that winding two coils in opposite directions with re erased magnetic polarity would counteract our 60cycle hum was a savant

    • @pvdguitars2951
      @pvdguitars2951 Месяц назад

      @@Notaluthier kinda like going to Australia for the first time and calling this an invention, rather than a discovery. History teaches us how much misery this has caused humanity.
      Mr Rontgen understood this very well. The discovery of X-rays was not an invention. Neither did Newton invent gravity, nor did Johannes Kepler invent the laws of cosmic motion!
      Imagine the devastation if Alexander Fleming would have claimed intellectual property over his discovery of the antibiotic properties of penicillin, rather than giving it freely back to humanity thereby saving millions? Unfortunately, the greed of modern society, big pharma in particular, only thinks in terms of becoming rich quickly, regardless of the human suffering!

  • @BlueberryStinkFinger62
    @BlueberryStinkFinger62 4 месяца назад +1

    Neither I'm loyal Epiphone