Weird that they decided to lie when "can make weird/unique guitar sounds" is WAY more interesting than "you can pick while awkwardly holding your hand 4 inches from the strings".
You're absolutely right, even though it would still be much cheaper, to just tape some magnets onto a regular guitar pick. But the effects he created in this video, are kinda sick tbh. It's like a very expressive version of a tremolo pedal. Might experiment a little bit with it in the future myself actually, it looks fun
Shows that their marketing department doesn't have actual musicians. Musicians spend plenty of money to get a new sound, and they WILL figure out and tell each other if something is a scam.
Im a non musician who thought the idea would help with the worry of tearing up fingers and just making playing it easier (I own an acoustic, but cant figure out how to play the damned thing), so the pitch (pun intended) suckered me into the idea but ... $40 for a pick is absurd. $40 for a magnet is absurd. However, if the idea is successful enough then other companies can join in on the concept and market competition/saturation drag it down to a more acceptable price tag eventually
At 5:10 there's text that mentions putting magnets too close to the pickups can damage them! I don't know how strong of a magnet you'd need to do that, but I wouldn't risk it lol
It's shiny. It's heavy. It's $50. Exactly what a non-musician would think is a perfect gift for the guitar player they know. I feel like there's an 86% chance I receive one of these before the year is over.
Certified non-musician here. Aside from the exorbitant price, youre 100% correct. I would totally get this as a gift for a guitar playing friend/cousin/sibling xD
My first thought was that it becomes quite important to avoid hitting the strings when using this thin neodymium magnet as they are quite brittle and can easily break if mishandled. I think that just gluing a couple of magnets on a regular pick is a safer idea if you want this effect and want to avoid having a sharp piece of metal close to your fingers...
@@skyricq Absolutely, I would even go one step further. The harder and more aggressive you are the less control you have and sound quality will suffer. But given how brittle neodymium magnets are, it is really mostly the outer plating that holds them together, I would be very careful to stress them. If you use this "pick" as it seems to be intended, inducing a current by moving them in front of a pickup without touching anything, they will of course not break. Given how close you have to be for it to have an effect it seems very likely to hit something by accident and end up with something unsuspectingly sharp that is easy to cut yourself with. I think that this product is a rather uninteresting idea with poor execution, YMMV. If anyone like it and does something interesting with it, great, just be a bit careful and don't cut yourself.
I'd argue that while it's not strictly a scam in that it does what it claims to, the advertising is still misleading in how it functions, which still makes it a scam. Like that Fushigi ball. It could technically do everything that was shown, but the advertising misled in how the trick was actually pulled off. It's just contact juggling.
There's also how the creators of the pick handle the criticism by trying to copystrike them so they really come off as scammy. They advertised it wrong, then responded even wronger.
Yeah, even their demonstrations are unaltered footage of the pick being used in a way that works on a normal electric guitar, they still framed it in a very misleading way. MP's claim that they aren't actually a scam leans pretty heavily on legal semantics, and tbh I feel like he's either biased due to being sent the pick for free or he's trying to avoid a defamation lawsuit by framing his conclusion in a positive way.
actually, it's unclear from his wording whether he was sent the pick by its creators or by a fan. If it was the former then he definitely needs to do a better job of making that clear, boyh for legal reasons as well as to make any potential bias clear to his viewers.
What I haven't seen anyone mention yet, is the possibility of altering the magnetic characteristics of the pickup itself, by waving a strong magnet in close proximity to the pole pieces. This may be a small risk, but I've heard a very experienced musician claim he'd experienced storing a guitar too close to speaker magnets in amp cabs had weakened his pickup magnets. Exposure to a strong magnetic field is essentially how the strength of custom pickup magnets are tuned during manufacture for different tone characteristics,
I was looking through the comments to see if someone already mentioned it. You can definitely demagnetize (or magnetize) your pickup magnets by sticking a strong neodymium magnet to them.
I was just going to say, I wouldn't bring this thing anywhere near any prized guitar that had 'great tone'. The potential to alter the magnetic properties of the poles, in unpredictable ways isn't worth the gimmickery.
Absolutely it can cause issues, keep magnets away from your pickups. A magnet, especially stronger ones like neodymium, can easily destroy the magnetic field of a pickup. This can cause specific strings to be much quieter than others, or even cause the entire pickup to be extremely quiet and unbalanced. The pole pieces inside the pickup have a very weak magnetic field, so when a magnet gets close to them it will strip away the field or alter it. I've tried it myself on a pickup by putting a magnet very close to each pole piece and it completely ruined it lol. The volume was drastically different between each string and wasn't usable. It is possible to fix this, but quite annoying. You can do it yourself by getting two somewhat strong magnets, put them in a bench vise or something and have them with aligned fields facing each other, then take the pickup and closely pass it between them in a specific direction a few times. The direction you need to pass it through depends on which polarity the pickup has, typically the middle pickup has reversed polarity for hum cancelling. This will re-magnetize the pole pieces. However it won't sound the exact same. In the factory, they have specific values of magnetization they use for each pickup and they have a machine that accurately magnetizes it. Some pickup manufacturers will let you pay them to restore it for you though.
The lack of physics knowledge in the music community hurts me as an amateur scientist, who is a musician. For as well as we understand electromagnetic and audio effects, there's a lot of mysticism that gets added to the the discussion. "It's warm", "glassy", "overdriven", "mellow". As if those words mean anything. I've seen one Fourier transform of a guitar, and only one manufacturer provides accurate information on the pickups. All that to say, I would love a minutephysics deep dive into more electric guitar.
Undergrad scientist here (environmental science though, not physics), and also a lifelong musician (drums, guitar, bass and synth), and likewise would love a deep dive on the physics of electric guitars!
Physics oriented content is great and much needed, but equations can't describe subjective experiences of sound. You can tell me the wavelength of red light, but it says nothing about the experience of being in a room painted red. We often use metaphors drawing from other sensory experiences to help describe how something sounds. See: bright, warm, etc. Well attested descriptors of sound going back hundreds of years in western musical traditions.
The thing with the very non-scientific music/sound terms is that they are intended to describe an experience in a way that looking at a frequency response graph can not do for any but the most committed audio nerds. When it comes to buying hardware I do think manufacturers should provide meaningful numerical data for comparison, but when it comes to discussing music words like "glassy", "mellow" etc are probably more useful and functionally meaningful than a set of numbers.
So the basic premise for these is that you're supposed to be hammering/pulling off (or perhaps even tapping) instead of playing the regular way and then use the magnetic pick to modulate... I think I'll stick to my pedalboard for modulation effects.
You can hear the pick attack in the promotional videos. Someone probably recorded a guitar being played with a pick and mimicked the movements for the video. It wasn't just the left hand causing the strings to vibrate.
As a guitar player myself, I'm glad to see stuff like this on a physics channel :) That being said, if you want to replicate the same sound without that pick, tremolo is what you're looking for. Of course that would require a pedal (be it standalone or a multi effects unit), or an amp with built in tremolo. Both of which are pricier than the pick.
@@ryryshredder148 what the guitar has is actually a vibrato unit, which is usually incorrectly named tremolo. Its effect is also completely different to a tremolo. The vibrato gives you a wavy sound, while the tremolo makes the signal go on and off.
@@ryryshredder148 Tremolo pedal and tremolo bar are different things. Tremolo pedal makes the volume go quiet and loud, whereas tremolo bar makes the pitch go high and low.
Neodymium magnets are quite brittle - they’re prone to breaking if they just snap together too quickly, so I’m kind of surprised that you can make a pick out of it. I presume it must have a sheath of steel to protect the magnet.
there's not a process for covering rare earth magnets with steel. the metallic jacket on them is just nickel or zinc. the inside of the magnet has all the structural strength of cheese, so the coating provides some additional toughness rigidity, but it won't stand up to rough handling.
@@dr.kraemer Zinc guitar picks already grind down quickly and leave my guitar covered in zinc dust. Magnet dust sounds like it would ruin a pickup if this managed to survive that long.
It would make more sense to not combine the magnet into the pick. I would try mounting the magnet onto a ring, or a thimble you can stick on the tip of your ring finger. That way, you can use any pick you want, not worry about losing or breaking it, not worry about the magnetic interactions between pick and playing, and have some independence between the picking motion and the magnetic modulation.
I do think that you're being a bit too charitable with the ad. What you tested was one sound shown in it and not the other techniques that the sellers say it can do. For that reason, it is a scam because they're not showing the post-processing or the limitations that you found. They are lying.
There was a dubstep cover band that utilizes some thermin-like controls to control effects (such as wah). One of which is commercially sold as "Hothand"
Just get 2 magnets and stick them to each other sandwiching the flat sides of a pick. Add a little glue so the magnets don't shift around the pick and done a $6 magnetic pick. Also rare earth magnets often come in a 4pk, so you can make 2 picks for $6.
The only concern I have about this idea is that it's gonna be the shittiest pick I've ever used to actually hold in hand and play. We don't go through a box of picks to find the one that is nice in hand and to play to then put two clumps on it.
Yeah, that negativity is getting you no where, how bout a video with someone who had more talent in his pinky than you do as a whole? ruclips.net/video/QF0PYQ8IOL4/видео.html @@xRickAstleyx
I’m a professional guitarist with 30+years experience, and have baccalauréat in physics and chemistry, fwiw. The X-pick is a scam for several different reasons: 1- they claim it works differently than what you are describing here. That’s misleading. They should know better. Therefore that is quite scammy in my book. 2- you claim that you can reproduce everything their promotional materials claim. But many, many people including myself, try as we might, following all the instructions to a T, cannot get even close to what they demonstrate on 90% of their techniques. The only technique that is unique to this pick and that we can master is the only one you play in this video. (I think they call it “hyper volume.”) 3- you are clearly playing their “hyper Wah” technique, but no one I know has been able to achieve it. If you are using an actual wah pedal, then you should disclose that. 4- calling their techniques “hyper delay” when there’s no real delay effect happening and it doesn’t sound like it, or “hyper reverse” when there’s no reverse effect happening and it doesn’t sound like it, or the EBow-like infinite sustain they demonstrate that is physically impossible, etc, etc, is the very definition of a scam, don’t you think? 5- when only one out of ten of their purported effects actually works and is unique to this pick, then it’s a scam. (Several of their effects are achievable with a regular pick, or better yet, with a metal one, so they’re not unique to the X-pick.) 6- look at all their promotional materials (using obvious overdubbing to pretend the effect can be achieved with their pick, long-winded poor attempts at humor, without much substance) and the way they handle criticism (fraudulently claiming copyright infringement, blocking, disparaging) and you can only come to one conclusion: it’s a scam.
This 👆🏼 And since the video says that the magnetic pick can only affect the pickup and not the strings, then any effect that can only be done by affecting the string is impossible. Like infinite sustain. Literally impossible. And the magnets make it a really poor pick: they get stuck to strings and you can’t play properly, it makes everything sluggish or makes the magnet unexpectedly jump out of your hand and stick to the strings or pickups.
Henry: you should try a guitar with a Sustainiac driver. That would make a neat physics video. Strings not only act like a metal diaphragm in a mic but also like a speaker/actuator/motor, through a driver circuit that actually causes the strings to vibrate sympathetically, giving you endless sustain.
Here's a fun thing you can try: You see the two screws beside your bridge pickup? If you turn those, you can move the pickup upwards closer to the strings. If the pickup is close enough to the strings, it will create a vibrato-effect when playing which is stronger depending on the selected pickup. Another interesting tidbit: David Gilmour allegedly used a strong magnet (a "cow magnet") on "Pink Floyd Live At Pompeii" to create the violin like sounds, not a slide. I will try it myself with a magnet (yes I'm aware of the danger to the pickup magnets!), since I get "friction noise" when trying a normal slide. And using an ebow on the high e-string is quite tricky.
When I was about 13 years old, around 1964 I was curious about magnets. For some crazy reason I placed a magnet near our color TV screen. It was a fascinating image distortion. I was appalled when the distortion didn't go away completely when I removed the magnet. I was able to clear it up by using my tape head demagnetizer. I did learn several years later why that occured.
I think that if you'd low pass the signal coming from the guitar at - say - 10 Hz, you could pretty much isolate how close the magnet pick is to the guitar pickups, and use that to control some more complex effects. Maybe they do that already, it'd make a lot of sense.
Low pass at 10 Hz? What do you do with the fretboard then? That starts at 82 Hz. Low pass at 160 Hz would roll off the harmonics, making it easier to play into a synthesizer, but for anything else that sounds dull.
RUclips: You've been watching guitar videos, here's some more. RUclips: You've been watching science videos, here's some more Channel I've been subscribed to for a decade and seen every single one of his videos: Posts a video about the science of guitars RUclips: You don't need to see this
Yeah, to the extent that the physical system behaves linearly well enough. Important to note is that he combined them before distortion, and not after. Distortion is by definition a nonlinear effect
You should be able to use the pick with the guitar even when there are no strings on it. With a lot of effect pedals you might get some interesting ambient sounds out of it...
You'd basically just be feeding the low frequency pulse out of the guitar into your post processing. Maybe with a ton of effects it could be cool, but that's also true with just about any sound tbh
I mean ... besides saying it's an honor to have such a detailed explanation from you, Dr. Reich, the coolest thing, are all the spontaneous smiles you give when using it! (7:53) It's like a movie with a happy ending! Your work remains unsurpassed, whatever theme you tackle! Thanks for everything! 😀 The XPick Staff
8:21 yes but the actual guitar sounds he’s making require a string to have an attack. It requires the string to be plucked to make that exact sound. They did lie and recorded a separate track to make the sound they showed in the video.
Nice lesson in experimental design, in the end. One minor critique is that by summing the "normal pick" signal and the "magnetic" noise you're implying linearity, which isn't the case: i.e. the pickup can't pick up a string while it's being interfered with, at least not in the same way. The video goes into this a bit near the end, but it's the pickup itself that isn't linear too.
Oh damn, i actually thought of the magnetic pick as a scam up until now. You did a way better job at explaining what it is and how to use it, than the inventors xD Now i just think it's a bit pricey, but would understand it if they shipped it with instructions about the playing techniques they invented
@@frosthammer917 Unfortunately, the presence of the "instructions" seems to be devoid of anything close to explaining or "instructing" anything related to their use. If this video can explain ALL the things that the pick is supposed to be doing within a few seconds, it's more than fair to point this out. I wholeheartedly agree with the original commentor as I also thought that this was a complete scam with NO original thought and insight at all up until I watched an extremely simple demonstration like this video. The XPick team seems to be doing a good job at monitoring the response they get from the media and I hope that you can relegate this as a constructive feedback: emphasize more on the technical side on promotions, don't overplay capabilities to get a false impression (or at least clarify the conditions exhaustively in such cases) and definitely don't rely on people to figure the significance of your slight innovation. Also be mindful of the impact your technology might have in regards to valuation; even if you had a significantly better product with an advanced technology, most guitarists can't/won't comprehend it. It is YOUR job to convince us to give your fancy magnetic picks a try. In its current state; the XPick products seem like a waste of every manufacturing and usage state with an exorbitant price tag for an effect that is in the same order of magnitude and controllability as me farting directly on the strings. However, there is a plethora of creativity in applications even with the most constrained usage.
I'd be afraid to use such a powerful magnet next to a very sensitive pickups. Not only are you risking burning the coils down, but also generate voltage spikes that potentially could destroy transistors of the first stage of an amplifier. Really risky.
You're not going to burn the coils, but you might get some very large spikes if the magnet slams onto the pole pieces. Whether that's a danger or not depends on the input stage of the amplifier. What I would be more worried about is demagnetizing alnico magnets. Ceramic magnets aren't likely to be damaged, but alnico definitely could.
@@nwimpney True, alnico magnets can be easily demagnetized. Overall, it's quite risky to experiment with neodymium magnets. People don't realize how powerful the magnetic field they have, and how big currents they're able to induce, destroying sensitive electronics, not to even mention their ability to magnetize some steel alloys that are slightly ferromagnetic, or demagnetize weak magnets like alnico. Funny to play with, but really dangerous.
04:19 The key (no pun intended) is that it all has to do with RATE OF CHANGE, i.e. movement of the string (or this pick) back and forth. That if a magnet is moved near a wire the field's changing strength causes induces a current in the wire, but that is NOT how a guitar pickup works. It is the inverse corollary that if a wire is moved near a magnet a current is induced in the wire. That current in the MOVING wire (string) produces a changing magnetic field that changes the pickup's magnetic field, which induces a changing current in the pickup's coil. The permanent magnetism is ALWAYS in the pickup. The strings are NOT magnets. A pick stretches the string by friction before releasing it to produce a very rapid relaxation which "bounces" further into tension due to the natural elasticity of the string, Then it "bounces" back to relaxation and overshoots into tension, repeatedly. This is called vibration. Any sufficiently strong magnet can also change the pickup's field, but the rate of change is limited to hand speed, which is ten to a thousand times slower than audio vibrations. Thus this device can only do so much. It is more like a "hand pedal" than a pick. (Hides behind Science pulpit and sneaks off to enjoy music.)
I'm glad you played a bit at the end! I'd really like to see a bit more though, if combining picking and "magnet-picking" can create any interesting effects. I can see some potential in having it right there when needed!
Fun thing connected with this: I play guitar and I live next to a tram (electric light rail - common in Europe) track. Every time a tram goes by, I can very audibly hear it through my amp. My guess is that the tram's electric motors create an electromagnetic field strong enough (it needs to move several tons of steel, so I assume it has to be pretty strong) that it interacts with the pickups on my guitar, sort of like in the video. I can clearly hear when the driver steps on the "gas" hits the breaks etc. You can probably imagine that with some distortion on, this sound can get quite "epic".
Hey man, really appreciate you taking a look at this and diving into what these picks really do. As a tool this seems like a fun way to introduce some manual modulation into my playing, which I prefer most of the time. Like tap tempo on delays or the treadle of a wah I really prefer having a physical interface for dialing in effects. I think I'll buy some magnets of different types/strengths and see what I can come up with. Great video overall
I can imagine someone like Buckethead having fun with it, but for me it just looks like a ridiculously expensive plectrum. (There's something about the pick making contact with the strings which is where a lot of the fun lies).
I have a question that's not related to this video but the portal videos you made what happens if you put a tiny portal through a big portal with the openings facing each other does it abruptly stop they cease to exist or they bounce apart please tell me I must know😮
Magnets also effect the ferromagnetic cores in inductors, saturating them somewhat. It's how I overclocked a VTECH Talking Whiz Kid Plus. I stuck a magnet on the oscillator coil in a specific place.
This is a technique used by some bands live. I personally used it a couple of days ago for checking if the wiring inside my guitar was working well after some mods, without having to string up the guitar.
Wouldn't have made a difference. Actives just have a built in preamp that allows them to have a higher output while keeping the noise floor low. They usually have a darker and "compressed" sound. People seem to be moving away from the active sound. I certainly prefer passives over my EMGs.
I’m early days of electric guitars, basically all effects pedal, if not electric guitars themselves, where realised by people saying “hey look, if we mess around with the electronics/signal/recorder/whatever like this, we get an interesting sound” Basically this is how alt rock was born and we all know that Beatles, Led Zeppelin and many others all did the most weird things. So why messing around with the pickups should not be allowed if it produces an interesting sound?
The origin of music effects can be pretty fascinating. Like, the distortion sound in rock originally came from broken speakers, and people were like "hey that sounds neat" and purposely cutting holes in their speakers to replicate it.
If the effect is that the volume modulates, then couldn't the magnet be pulling or pushing the strings closer to or further from the pickup? This would be "moving the strings." It's not plucking them, but could still be moving them. The magnet could also be inducing a current in the pickup coil if it's causing a changing field within the coil as it passes. But I don't see how this would cause volume modulation. It would be more like a low frequency bump. If you can vibrate your hand at audible frequencies (20 to 20,000 times a second... good luck) you might get ebow like sounds.
Thought experiment. Stick a few paper clips to a magnet, so they make a tower or chain. Now wave another magnet near the end of the chain. The paper clips move in response. Therefore, the strings move due to the motion of the magnetic pick. Maybe not a lot, but some. Compare the amplitude of blowing upon the strings, also a quiet effect which needs gain to sound properly -- but it works and the strings definitely move.
It could be interesting to place it on the ring or little finger to move them independently (ish) from the pick. With a bit of exercise you could do some weird things
You can get a similar effect by just moving the low E string rapidly towards and away from the pickup's pole piece. Warning: There is a possibility that a magnetic guitar pick could affect the magnets in the pickup, if it's strong enough you could even discharge the magnetization (or could be used to reverse the polarity in a hurry)
Just use a magnetic ring with a normal pick like the rest of us. make fist and curl your wrist to make WHA-WHA or just use the normal pick in you fingers to play.
I just realized what a perfect tool an electric guitar can be for physics teachers for combining several parts of the curriculum. You can learn something about electric circuits, electro magnets, sound waves and harmonics all while butchering the first chords of Smoke On The Water :)
Yeah dude. I've played the guitar for nearly twenty years, and I've taught for about 10. I always incorporate my guitar in my physics classes. Plus I get to show off a bit.
Sometimes I play my guitars unplugged just to hear the unamplified characteristics. They all sound slightly different believe it or not even if it’s a few Telecasters.
In the 1970s, I extracted a little speaker from my 7 transistor radio, and would swing it by the strings of my cheap electric guitar. We had 3 AM radio stations, and the car commercials always made the guitar sound like a 12 year old Jimmy Hendrix. My Dad hated it, so I knew it was a success. -- 9.6.2023 -- North Central Florida
This seems like an appropriate place to ask this question: Why does a hollow body electric guitar sound different to a solid body electric guitar through an amp, given that the pickups are just sensitive to the movement of the strings?
Since you can get the effect by adding the magnetic pick signal to the chord signal, it seems like you can just use a signal chain that doesn't need/use the pick at all?
The little metal doohickeys that stick out of the pickup aren't actually magnets, even though they're called "pole pieces". Pickups have only one bar magnet that runs along their length. The pole pieces are just chunks of ferromagnetic material that help to shape and conduct the flux, similar to the core of a transformer. They make the induction more efficient by channeling the field to the right location, but they don't create the field and aren't strictly part of the circuit.
Weird that they decided to lie when "can make weird/unique guitar sounds" is WAY more interesting than "you can pick while awkwardly holding your hand 4 inches from the strings".
The distance on the product video was crazy.
You're absolutely right, even though it would still be much cheaper, to just tape some magnets onto a regular guitar pick.
But the effects he created in this video, are kinda sick tbh.
It's like a very expressive version of a tremolo pedal. Might experiment a little bit with it in the future myself actually, it looks fun
Shows that their marketing department doesn't have actual musicians. Musicians spend plenty of money to get a new sound, and they WILL figure out and tell each other if something is a scam.
Im a non musician who thought the idea would help with the worry of tearing up fingers and just making playing it easier (I own an acoustic, but cant figure out how to play the damned thing), so the pitch (pun intended) suckered me into the idea but ... $40 for a pick is absurd. $40 for a magnet is absurd. However, if the idea is successful enough then other companies can join in on the concept and market competition/saturation drag it down to a more acceptable price tag eventually
@@Scoaster86Yep, musicians are going to love this.
>walks into guitar store
>shakes a powerful magnet near the guitar pickups
>refuses to elaborate, leaves
This was a fun one. Also think about it: you're not gonna lose your picks anymore because you can just stick them to the guitar.
before I watched the video, I thought that was the entire point haha
Nah, I'm gonna lose that pick regardless.
And that's why people jam it under the strings at the head, right?
At 5:10 there's text that mentions putting magnets too close to the pickups can damage them! I don't know how strong of a magnet you'd need to do that, but I wouldn't risk it lol
Yeah picks are cheap. Pickups are not. I can buy about 300 picks for the price of one pickup for my bass guitar.
"The physics is simple, the human relations are complicated" sounds like a CGP Grey line.
ChatGPT says the same...
Sounds like any STEM person trying to relate to people!
I want it painted grey.
Yes, I know what you mean
I want a short RUclips explainer video about the human communication phenomenon.
It's shiny.
It's heavy.
It's $50.
Exactly what a non-musician would think is a perfect gift for the guitar player they know.
I feel like there's an 86% chance I receive one of these before the year is over.
Lol 👍
Now I finally know who buys this stuff!
Lol
@sabrinaaa22590could always drill a hole in it and make a key ring pick
Certified non-musician here. Aside from the exorbitant price, youre 100% correct. I would totally get this as a gift for a guitar playing friend/cousin/sibling xD
My first thought was that it becomes quite important to avoid hitting the strings when using this thin neodymium magnet as they are quite brittle and can easily break if mishandled. I think that just gluing a couple of magnets on a regular pick is a safer idea if you want this effect and want to avoid having a sharp piece of metal close to your fingers...
@@skyricq Absolutely, I would even go one step further. The harder and more aggressive you are the less control you have and sound quality will suffer. But given how brittle neodymium magnets are, it is really mostly the outer plating that holds them together, I would be very careful to stress them. If you use this "pick" as it seems to be intended, inducing a current by moving them in front of a pickup without touching anything, they will of course not break. Given how close you have to be for it to have an effect it seems very likely to hit something by accident and end up with something unsuspectingly sharp that is easy to cut yourself with. I think that this product is a rather uninteresting idea with poor execution, YMMV. If anyone like it and does something interesting with it, great, just be a bit careful and don't cut yourself.
I played my guitar with a steel pick for a while and didn't have any issues
@ForgettD the neodymium pick is brittle, not the strings
They are coated with metal for a few reasons. One of them is that they contain very nasty heavy elements.
I'd argue that while it's not strictly a scam in that it does what it claims to, the advertising is still misleading in how it functions, which still makes it a scam.
Like that Fushigi ball. It could technically do everything that was shown, but the advertising misled in how the trick was actually pulled off. It's just contact juggling.
There's also how the creators of the pick handle the criticism by trying to copystrike them so they really come off as scammy. They advertised it wrong, then responded even wronger.
Yeah, even their demonstrations are unaltered footage of the pick being used in a way that works on a normal electric guitar, they still framed it in a very misleading way. MP's claim that they aren't actually a scam leans pretty heavily on legal semantics, and tbh I feel like he's either biased due to being sent the pick for free or he's trying to avoid a defamation lawsuit by framing his conclusion in a positive way.
actually, it's unclear from his wording whether he was sent the pick by its creators or by a fan. If it was the former then he definitely needs to do a better job of making that clear, boyh for legal reasons as well as to make any potential bias clear to his viewers.
fushigi cures depression, magnet pic also. what are you talk about?
This is the scammiest scam if I've ever seen one
What I haven't seen anyone mention yet, is the possibility of altering the magnetic characteristics of the pickup itself, by waving a strong magnet in close proximity to the pole pieces. This may be a small risk, but I've heard a very experienced musician claim he'd experienced storing a guitar too close to speaker magnets in amp cabs had weakened his pickup magnets. Exposure to a strong magnetic field is essentially how the strength of custom pickup magnets are tuned during manufacture for different tone characteristics,
I was looking through the comments to see if someone already mentioned it. You can definitely demagnetize (or magnetize) your pickup magnets by sticking a strong neodymium magnet to them.
There have been stories on Gearpage about this phenomenon.
Sadly can't post any links, because RUclips always yeets my comments when I do 😭
I was just going to say, I wouldn't bring this thing anywhere near any prized guitar that had 'great tone'. The potential to alter the magnetic properties of the poles, in unpredictable ways isn't worth the gimmickery.
there's a subtitle referencing this at 5:06
Absolutely it can cause issues, keep magnets away from your pickups. A magnet, especially stronger ones like neodymium, can easily destroy the magnetic field of a pickup. This can cause specific strings to be much quieter than others, or even cause the entire pickup to be extremely quiet and unbalanced.
The pole pieces inside the pickup have a very weak magnetic field, so when a magnet gets close to them it will strip away the field or alter it. I've tried it myself on a pickup by putting a magnet very close to each pole piece and it completely ruined it lol. The volume was drastically different between each string and wasn't usable.
It is possible to fix this, but quite annoying. You can do it yourself by getting two somewhat strong magnets, put them in a bench vise or something and have them with aligned fields facing each other, then take the pickup and closely pass it between them in a specific direction a few times. The direction you need to pass it through depends on which polarity the pickup has, typically the middle pickup has reversed polarity for hum cancelling. This will re-magnetize the pole pieces. However it won't sound the exact same. In the factory, they have specific values of magnetization they use for each pickup and they have a machine that accurately magnetizes it. Some pickup manufacturers will let you pay them to restore it for you though.
The lack of physics knowledge in the music community hurts me as an amateur scientist, who is a musician. For as well as we understand electromagnetic and audio effects, there's a lot of mysticism that gets added to the the discussion. "It's warm", "glassy", "overdriven", "mellow". As if those words mean anything. I've seen one Fourier transform of a guitar, and only one manufacturer provides accurate information on the pickups.
All that to say, I would love a minutephysics deep dive into more electric guitar.
Undergrad scientist here (environmental science though, not physics), and also a lifelong musician (drums, guitar, bass and synth), and likewise would love a deep dive on the physics of electric guitars!
As a guitarist and major gear head. The guitar community is full of some of the most gullible, biased, anti-science people I've ever seen.
The CSGuitars is for you. Guitarist with an EE background making technically oriented guitar content.
Physics oriented content is great and much needed, but equations can't describe subjective experiences of sound. You can tell me the wavelength of red light, but it says nothing about the experience of being in a room painted red. We often use metaphors drawing from other sensory experiences to help describe how something sounds. See: bright, warm, etc. Well attested descriptors of sound going back hundreds of years in western musical traditions.
The thing with the very non-scientific music/sound terms is that they are intended to describe an experience in a way that looking at a frequency response graph can not do for any but the most committed audio nerds. When it comes to buying hardware I do think manufacturers should provide meaningful numerical data for comparison, but when it comes to discussing music words like "glassy", "mellow" etc are probably more useful and functionally meaningful than a set of numbers.
So the basic premise for these is that you're supposed to be hammering/pulling off (or perhaps even tapping) instead of playing the regular way and then use the magnetic pick to modulate...
I think I'll stick to my pedalboard for modulation effects.
You can hear the pick attack in the promotional videos. Someone probably recorded a guitar being played with a pick and mimicked the movements for the video. It wasn't just the left hand causing the strings to vibrate.
As a guitar player myself, I'm glad to see stuff like this on a physics channel :)
That being said, if you want to replicate the same sound without that pick, tremolo is what you're looking for. Of course that would require a pedal (be it standalone or a multi effects unit), or an amp with built in tremolo. Both of which are pricier than the pick.
Fair, but the advertised sound isn't just tremolo, there's also some harmonic feedback going on
@@ileutur6863 true! But at least it's "most" of the sound the pick makes, that kind of stuttery, choppy sound.
@@ryryshredder148Tremolo on a guitar is actually named wrong. Tremolo is volume modulation. Vibrato is pitch modulation
@@ryryshredder148 what the guitar has is actually a vibrato unit, which is usually incorrectly named tremolo. Its effect is also completely different to a tremolo. The vibrato gives you a wavy sound, while the tremolo makes the signal go on and off.
@@ryryshredder148 Tremolo pedal and tremolo bar are different things. Tremolo pedal makes the volume go quiet and loud, whereas tremolo bar makes the pitch go high and low.
Neodymium magnets are quite brittle - they’re prone to breaking if they just snap together too quickly, so I’m kind of surprised that you can make a pick out of it. I presume it must have a sheath of steel to protect the magnet.
there's not a process for covering rare earth magnets with steel. the metallic jacket on them is just nickel or zinc. the inside of the magnet has all the structural strength of cheese, so the coating provides some additional toughness rigidity, but it won't stand up to rough handling.
@@dr.kraemer Well it's a good thing it isn't used on taught steel wires or anything
the gimmick is that you 'strum' in the air.
This is why I'd prefer a normal pick with a magnet inset of it, if I was going to use this as a trick.
@@dr.kraemer Zinc guitar picks already grind down quickly and leave my guitar covered in zinc dust. Magnet dust sounds like it would ruin a pickup if this managed to survive that long.
It would make more sense to not combine the magnet into the pick. I would try mounting the magnet onto a ring, or a thimble you can stick on the tip of your ring finger. That way, you can use any pick you want, not worry about losing or breaking it, not worry about the magnetic interactions between pick and playing, and have some independence between the picking motion and the magnetic modulation.
Or to just use a small magnet embedded in the finger grip
I do think that you're being a bit too charitable with the ad. What you tested was one sound shown in it and not the other techniques that the sellers say it can do. For that reason, it is a scam because they're not showing the post-processing or the limitations that you found. They are lying.
Wow, I can't believe I learned more about this product from a physics channel than any of the guitar channels.
Has anyone ever combined the effects of a theremin and an electric guitar?
I've seen guitar pedals used with Theremin
That is kind of what an Ebow is.
My first thought.
That doesn't even make sense.
There was a dubstep cover band that utilizes some thermin-like controls to control effects (such as wah). One of which is commercially sold as "Hothand"
Just get 2 magnets and stick them to each other sandwiching the flat sides of a pick.
Add a little glue so the magnets don't shift around the pick and done a $6 magnetic pick.
Also rare earth magnets often come in a 4pk, so you can make 2 picks for $6.
The only concern I have about this idea is that it's gonna be the shittiest pick I've ever used to actually hold in hand and play. We don't go through a box of picks to find the one that is nice in hand and to play to then put two clumps on it.
Skip the pick, glue the magnets to your fingers.
@@rolen47 😂 or you could wear a glove with magnets stuck on it. You could stick magnets on all five fingers without even having to hold anything
The idea here is really neat. It's mostly a gimmick, but put it in the right hands and somebody is gonna do something really mindblowing on it.
True of anything, given enough time ...
no they arent lol
@@xRickAstleyx Buckethead has a whole sound around turning off and on a guitar really really quick. Gimmick or not, theres potential with it.
@@Theonixcoyes. and he uses a killswitch for that. go ahead and post a video of you using this thing to make cool music
Yeah, that negativity is getting you no where, how bout a video with someone who had more talent in his pinky than you do as a whole? ruclips.net/video/QF0PYQ8IOL4/видео.html @@xRickAstleyx
I’m a professional guitarist with 30+years experience, and have baccalauréat in physics and chemistry, fwiw. The X-pick is a scam for several different reasons:
1- they claim it works differently than what you are describing here. That’s misleading. They should know better. Therefore that is quite scammy in my book.
2- you claim that you can reproduce everything their promotional materials claim. But many, many people including myself, try as we might, following all the instructions to a T, cannot get even close to what they demonstrate on 90% of their techniques. The only technique that is unique to this pick and that we can master is the only one you play in this video. (I think they call it “hyper volume.”)
3- you are clearly playing their “hyper Wah” technique, but no one I know has been able to achieve it. If you are using an actual wah pedal, then you should disclose that.
4- calling their techniques “hyper delay” when there’s no real delay effect happening and it doesn’t sound like it, or “hyper reverse” when there’s no reverse effect happening and it doesn’t sound like it, or the EBow-like infinite sustain they demonstrate that is physically impossible, etc, etc, is the very definition of a scam, don’t you think?
5- when only one out of ten of their purported effects actually works and is unique to this pick, then it’s a scam. (Several of their effects are achievable with a regular pick, or better yet, with a metal one, so they’re not unique to the X-pick.)
6- look at all their promotional materials (using obvious overdubbing to pretend the effect can be achieved with their pick, long-winded poor attempts at humor, without much substance) and the way they handle criticism (fraudulently claiming copyright infringement, blocking, disparaging) and you can only come to one conclusion: it’s a scam.
This 👆🏼 And since the video says that the magnetic pick can only affect the pickup and not the strings, then any effect that can only be done by affecting the string is impossible. Like infinite sustain. Literally impossible. And the magnets make it a really poor pick: they get stuck to strings and you can’t play properly, it makes everything sluggish or makes the magnet unexpectedly jump out of your hand and stick to the strings or pickups.
Very fitting time to watch this as I’m picking up guitar and finishing up basic magnetic flux physics
Henry: you should try a guitar with a Sustainiac driver. That would make a neat physics video. Strings not only act like a metal diaphragm in a mic but also like a speaker/actuator/motor, through a driver circuit that actually causes the strings to vibrate sympathetically, giving you endless sustain.
"The Physics is simple, the human relationships are complicated." - Understatement of the century.
Good to see you back. Would love to see more content.
Here's a fun thing you can try: You see the two screws beside your bridge pickup? If you turn those, you can move the pickup upwards closer to the strings. If the pickup is close enough to the strings, it will create a vibrato-effect when playing which is stronger depending on the selected pickup.
Another interesting tidbit: David Gilmour allegedly used a strong magnet (a "cow magnet") on "Pink Floyd Live At Pompeii" to create the violin like sounds, not a slide. I will try it myself with a magnet (yes I'm aware of the danger to the pickup magnets!), since I get "friction noise" when trying a normal slide. And using an ebow on the high e-string is quite tricky.
1:04 this gave me a heart attack. I thought some had burglared into my appartement
When I was about 13 years old, around 1964 I was curious about magnets. For some crazy reason I placed a magnet near our color TV screen. It was a fascinating image distortion. I was appalled when the distortion didn't go away completely when I removed the magnet. I was able to clear it up by using my tape head demagnetizer. I did learn several years later why that occured.
Back in the time where you'd be in serious trouble with your parents for your experiments... now, good luck even doing any experiments.
3:51 for those of you that came for the actual video title.
I think that if you'd low pass the signal coming from the guitar at - say - 10 Hz, you could pretty much isolate how close the magnet pick is to the guitar pickups, and use that to control some more complex effects. Maybe they do that already, it'd make a lot of sense.
Low pass at 10 Hz? What do you do with the fretboard then? That starts at 82 Hz. Low pass at 160 Hz would roll off the harmonics, making it easier to play into a synthesizer, but for anything else that sounds dull.
I have been deeply invested in this controversy and I never expected it to make its way to such a big channel. Thanks so much for this video!
RUclips: You've been watching guitar videos, here's some more.
RUclips: You've been watching science videos, here's some more
Channel I've been subscribed to for a decade and seen every single one of his videos: Posts a video about the science of guitars
RUclips: You don't need to see this
Doesnt it have more to do with the strings disrupting the magnetic field of the pickup versus the pickup magnetising the string?
This is really nuanced in terms of a product review and I really respect that
Great video! Thanks. 7:20 would actually be great for a signals and systems course, as a way to demonstrate the linearity of signals😮
Yeah, to the extent that the physical system behaves linearly well enough. Important to note is that he combined them before distortion, and not after.
Distortion is by definition a nonlinear effect
You should be able to use the pick with the guitar even when there are no strings on it. With a lot of effect pedals you might get some interesting ambient sounds out of it...
You'd basically just be feeding the low frequency pulse out of the guitar into your post processing.
Maybe with a ton of effects it could be cool, but that's also true with just about any sound tbh
adding "metal machine music" to the wikipedia list for multiple discoveries
I mean ... besides saying it's an honor to have such a detailed explanation from you,
Dr. Reich, the coolest thing, are all the spontaneous smiles you give when using it! (7:53)
It's like a movie with a happy ending! Your work remains unsurpassed, whatever theme you tackle!
Thanks for everything! 😀
The XPick Staff
1:26 never going back again
8:21 yes but the actual guitar sounds he’s making require a string to have an attack. It requires the string to be plucked to make that exact sound. They did lie and recorded a separate track to make the sound they showed in the video.
so cool that you made a video on this I absolutely love learning about physics relating to music
Some of our guitarists pickups pick up our hearing aid loop which is always an entertaining thing to have to remember
Either microfonic pickups or bad cable. Pickups can be 'repaired', cables can be exchanged.
Nice lesson in experimental design, in the end. One minor critique is that by summing the "normal pick" signal and the "magnetic" noise you're implying linearity, which isn't the case: i.e. the pickup can't pick up a string while it's being interfered with, at least not in the same way. The video goes into this a bit near the end, but it's the pickup itself that isn't linear too.
Oh damn, i actually thought of the magnetic pick as a scam up until now. You did a way better job at explaining what it is and how to use it, than the inventors xD
Now i just think it's a bit pricey, but would understand it if they shipped it with instructions about the playing techniques they invented
The instructions seems to all be on RUclips. So you know free to access already.
@@frosthammer917 Unfortunately, the presence of the "instructions" seems to be devoid of anything close to explaining or "instructing" anything related to their use. If this video can explain ALL the things that the pick is supposed to be doing within a few seconds, it's more than fair to point this out.
I wholeheartedly agree with the original commentor as I also thought that this was a complete scam with NO original thought and insight at all up until I watched an extremely simple demonstration like this video.
The XPick team seems to be doing a good job at monitoring the response they get from the media and I hope that you can relegate this as a constructive feedback: emphasize more on the technical side on promotions, don't overplay capabilities to get a false impression (or at least clarify the conditions exhaustively in such cases) and definitely don't rely on people to figure the significance of your slight innovation.
Also be mindful of the impact your technology might have in regards to valuation; even if you had a significantly better product with an advanced technology, most guitarists can't/won't comprehend it.
It is YOUR job to convince us to give your fancy magnetic picks a try.
In its current state; the XPick products seem like a waste of every manufacturing and usage state with an exorbitant price tag for an effect that is in the same order of magnitude and controllability as me farting directly on the strings.
However, there is a plethora of creativity in applications even with the most constrained usage.
I'd be afraid to use such a powerful magnet next to a very sensitive pickups. Not only are you risking burning the coils down, but also generate voltage spikes that potentially could destroy transistors of the first stage of an amplifier. Really risky.
You're not going to burn the coils, but you might get some very large spikes if the magnet slams onto the pole pieces. Whether that's a danger or not depends on the input stage of the amplifier.
What I would be more worried about is demagnetizing alnico magnets. Ceramic magnets aren't likely to be damaged, but alnico definitely could.
@@nwimpney True, alnico magnets can be easily demagnetized.
Overall, it's quite risky to experiment with neodymium magnets. People don't realize how powerful the magnetic field they have, and how big currents they're able to induce, destroying sensitive electronics, not to even mention their ability to magnetize some steel alloys that are slightly ferromagnetic, or demagnetize weak magnets like alnico. Funny to play with, but really dangerous.
04:19 The key (no pun intended) is that it all has to do with RATE OF CHANGE, i.e. movement of the string (or this pick) back and forth. That if a magnet is moved near a wire the field's changing strength causes induces a current in the wire, but that is NOT how a guitar pickup works. It is the inverse corollary that if a wire is moved near a magnet a current is induced in the wire. That current in the MOVING wire (string) produces a changing magnetic field that changes the pickup's magnetic field, which induces a changing current in the pickup's coil. The permanent magnetism is ALWAYS in the pickup. The strings are NOT magnets.
A pick stretches the string by friction before releasing it to produce a very rapid relaxation which "bounces" further into tension due to the natural elasticity of the string, Then it "bounces" back to relaxation and overshoots into tension, repeatedly. This is called vibration.
Any sufficiently strong magnet can also change the pickup's field, but the rate of change is limited to hand speed, which is ten to a thousand times slower than audio vibrations. Thus this device can only do so much. It is more like a "hand pedal" than a pick.
(Hides behind Science pulpit and sneaks off to enjoy music.)
solid video - I love deep dives into little rabbit holes like that
I'm glad you played a bit at the end! I'd really like to see a bit more though, if combining picking and "magnet-picking" can create any interesting effects. I can see some potential in having it right there when needed!
The arguement and pick seems like the definition of "right answer, wrong reason"
that explorer you played in the beginning was dope. I love those guitars
“ Ok guys so I managed to get my hands on a guitar “ - casually buys a fender strat-
So different to your usual style. I think it's the first time I've seen you, and not only your cartoons.
Thanks for the variety. That was great.
8:25 "a confusing situation"
The most charitable reading of any situation in the history of mankind
This makes me want to go back to trying to learn the guitar like I did in High School, very briefly
Fun thing connected with this: I play guitar and I live next to a tram (electric light rail - common in Europe) track. Every time a tram goes by, I can very audibly hear it through my amp. My guess is that the tram's electric motors create an electromagnetic field strong enough (it needs to move several tons of steel, so I assume it has to be pretty strong) that it interacts with the pickups on my guitar, sort of like in the video. I can clearly hear when the driver steps on the "gas" hits the breaks etc. You can probably imagine that with some distortion on, this sound can get quite "epic".
Hey man, really appreciate you taking a look at this and diving into what these picks really do. As a tool this seems like a fun way to introduce some manual modulation into my playing, which I prefer most of the time. Like tap tempo on delays or the treadle of a wah I really prefer having a physical interface for dialing in effects. I think I'll buy some magnets of different types/strengths and see what I can come up with.
Great video overall
"Ok I managed to get my hands on a guitar." *Pulls out a stratocaster*
I can imagine someone like Buckethead having fun with it, but for me it just looks like a ridiculously expensive plectrum. (There's something about the pick making contact with the strings which is where a lot of the fun lies).
I have been playing guitar for 20 years but it isn't until now I have started swapping out component parts and soldering etc. It's so fun 😁
Hi, get yourself some solid literature. Try to really understand what your changing or repairing. Thats where the real fun starts;)
@@MichaelWinter-ss6lx Any tips on where to begin? (No sarcasm!)
Thank you for the unboxing video!
Bro suddenly turned into an amateur Buckethead.
3:07 this is cool. sound like a wah wah pedal but more spacey
I like how he calls them maygnets
I have a question that's not related to this video but the portal videos you made what happens if you put a tiny portal through a big portal with the openings facing each other does it abruptly stop they cease to exist or they bounce apart please tell me I must know😮
I like how you make it look like you can’t really play the guitar until after the “credits” you clearly can
Magnets also effect the ferromagnetic cores in inductors, saturating them somewhat.
It's how I overclocked a VTECH Talking Whiz Kid Plus. I stuck a magnet on the oscillator coil in a specific place.
What if you put it on a hand drill and spin it fast by the pick ups?
it makes a tone, I did it with wound up string lol
This is a technique used by some bands live. I personally used it a couple of days ago for checking if the wiring inside my guitar was working well after some mods, without having to string up the guitar.
Great and informative video!
The guitars you played all have passive pickups; what difference is there, if any, wrt active pickups?
Wouldn't have made a difference. Actives just have a built in preamp that allows them to have a higher output while keeping the noise floor low. They usually have a darker and "compressed" sound. People seem to be moving away from the active sound. I certainly prefer passives over my EMGs.
I’m early days of electric guitars, basically all effects pedal, if not electric guitars themselves, where realised by people saying “hey look, if we mess around with the electronics/signal/recorder/whatever like this, we get an interesting sound”
Basically this is how alt rock was born and we all know that Beatles, Led Zeppelin and many others all did the most weird things.
So why messing around with the pickups should not be allowed if it produces an interesting sound?
The origin of music effects can be pretty fascinating. Like, the distortion sound in rock originally came from broken speakers, and people were like "hey that sounds neat" and purposely cutting holes in their speakers to replicate it.
If the effect is that the volume modulates, then couldn't the magnet be pulling or pushing the strings closer to or further from the pickup?
This would be "moving the strings."
It's not plucking them, but could still be moving them.
The magnet could also be inducing a current in the pickup coil if it's causing a changing field within the coil as it passes. But I don't see how this would cause volume modulation. It would be more like a low frequency bump.
If you can vibrate your hand at audible frequencies (20 to 20,000 times a second... good luck) you might get ebow like sounds.
I got a simply guitar ad before this started
so basically its just a magnet and the pick shape is completely pointless since you dont use it to pluck the strings
I bet their sales went up after the video :) there's no bad advertisement:)
So good!!!! Literally flawless video
Thought experiment. Stick a few paper clips to a magnet, so they make a tower or chain. Now wave another magnet near the end of the chain. The paper clips move in response. Therefore, the strings move due to the motion of the magnetic pick. Maybe not a lot, but some. Compare the amplitude of blowing upon the strings, also a quiet effect which needs gain to sound properly -- but it works and the strings definitely move.
It could be interesting to place it on the ring or little finger to move them independently (ish) from the pick. With a bit of exercise you could do some weird things
It's awesome that you deep dived this! A comment from Sammy G would be deserved :P
So does the pick damage the magnets in the pickups over time? If so, major reason to avoid it!
You can get a similar effect by just moving the low E string rapidly towards and away from the pickup's pole piece.
Warning: There is a possibility that a magnetic guitar pick could affect the magnets in the pickup, if it's strong enough you could even discharge the magnetization (or could be used to reverse the polarity in a hurry)
Wouldn’t the magnetic pick be potentially damaging to your pickups?
Just use a magnetic ring with a normal pick like the rest of us.
make fist and curl your wrist to make WHA-WHA or just use the normal pick in you fingers to play.
I just realized what a perfect tool an electric guitar can be for physics teachers for combining several parts of the curriculum. You can learn something about electric circuits, electro magnets, sound waves and harmonics all while butchering the first chords of Smoke On The Water :)
Yeah dude. I've played the guitar for nearly twenty years, and I've taught for about 10. I always incorporate my guitar in my physics classes. Plus I get to show off a bit.
Minute Physics: I don’t know how to play guitar
*Proceeds to play Wish You Were Here*
Sometimes I play my guitars unplugged just to hear the unamplified characteristics. They all sound slightly different believe it or not even if it’s a few Telecasters.
In the 1970s, I extracted a little speaker from
my 7 transistor radio, and would swing it by
the strings of my cheap electric guitar.
We had 3 AM radio stations, and the car
commercials always made the guitar sound
like a 12 year old Jimmy Hendrix.
My Dad hated it, so I knew it was a success.
-- 9.6.2023
-- North Central Florida
This seems like an appropriate place to ask this question: Why does a hollow body electric guitar sound different to a solid body electric guitar through an amp, given that the pickups are just sensitive to the movement of the strings?
Pickups are indeed only sensitive to strings movement, but strings movement can be affected by guitar construction
I miss your videos so much. Great to have a new one!
Very informative, thanks for demonstrating
It really comes down to the proximity of the pic to the pickup to create the magnetic fields of excite the string
Thanks for adding the audio detail caption at the bottom! :) I thought that’s what you meant/what I was seeing but it’s not know know for sure! :)
Either very patient neighbours or they had a day out.
So do the frets affect anything the magnetic pick does when it's not in contact with the strings?
Finally, a new video. The previous one was 5 months ago.
Since you can get the effect by adding the magnetic pick signal to the chord signal, it seems like you can just use a signal chain that doesn't need/use the pick at all?
Really glad you defended that with facts!
Really good to have that disclaimer about ruining your pickups with the magnet - I was waiting lol great explanation and tech breakdown
Would the size or strength of the magnet your using in your experiment change anything?
What a fascinating video! Subscribed
Thanks for clearing the confusion up for a product I had no idea even existed 15mins ago.
What amazes me is that someone went to all the trouble to market and distribute something so half arsed...
The little metal doohickeys that stick out of the pickup aren't actually magnets, even though they're called "pole pieces".
Pickups have only one bar magnet that runs along their length. The pole pieces are just chunks of ferromagnetic material that help to shape and conduct the flux, similar to the core of a transformer. They make the induction more efficient by channeling the field to the right location, but they don't create the field and aren't strictly part of the circuit.