MisterBill2
- Joined Jan 23, 2018
- 27,651
About 1980, when Hall Effect IC devices were quite new, and after discussions with both guitar players and a sales-rep from a big semiconductor company, I decided to develop a non-inductive guitar pickup. The sales rep saw it as a whole new market into a different industry, and I saw it as a way to greatly reduce production costs and improve the frequency response, which was not at all even close to flat.
The first effort was a single hall device glued to a magnetized steel bar and taped into position on a steel-stringed acoustic guitar. The amplifier was a tube-type utility amplifier with a maximum of about 5 watts output. The hall device power was 5 volts from a regulated power supply known to have a hum-free output.
With an air-gap of about 3/16 inch, I picked the string, and the note came through quite well, but not as loud as the "white noise" from the hall device. The noise covered most of the frequency spectrum, becoming stronger as the frequency increased.
Probably I should have experimented with different supply voltages and stronger magnetic fields, but it was clear at the time that this type of device was not going to impact the musical world yet.
Perhaps today there are much quieter hall devices, but at that time the major emphasis was on using them in the switching mode. That is probably why we still use the wire-wound magnetic pickups with 5000 turns of #36 copper wire.
The first effort was a single hall device glued to a magnetized steel bar and taped into position on a steel-stringed acoustic guitar. The amplifier was a tube-type utility amplifier with a maximum of about 5 watts output. The hall device power was 5 volts from a regulated power supply known to have a hum-free output.
With an air-gap of about 3/16 inch, I picked the string, and the note came through quite well, but not as loud as the "white noise" from the hall device. The noise covered most of the frequency spectrum, becoming stronger as the frequency increased.
Probably I should have experimented with different supply voltages and stronger magnetic fields, but it was clear at the time that this type of device was not going to impact the musical world yet.
Perhaps today there are much quieter hall devices, but at that time the major emphasis was on using them in the switching mode. That is probably why we still use the wire-wound magnetic pickups with 5000 turns of #36 copper wire.

