walters said:
Where is the ferromagnetism in a guitar pickup?
What does the ferromagnetism in a guitar pickup do?
Does the ferromagnetism change the flux,magnetic field or tone of a guitar pickup?
harmonic oscillator theory affects the resonance frequency? why and how?
A magnet with wire wrapped around it produces a "harmonic oscillator"?
what does this harmonic oscillator do?
the magnet exists in the pickup of an electric guitar. Think of an electric guitar pickup like a linear machine (or not if you are not machine orientated)
**broken link removed**
As you can see from this picture there are a number of poles (hence the linear machine analogy).
WHen nothing is changing a fixed flux is present in the pickups winding. When a string is plucked (the string MUST be ferrous to effect the field) it changes the magnetic proporties of the system and a changing flux occurs, a changing flux is a XFMR is current and it is this current that is then amplified
THe ferromagnetism as in the magnet present doesnt change the flux, it provides the flux, the strings of the guitar change the relunctance path that the flux can take.
harmonic oscillator theory affects the resonance frequency? why and how?
bit confused what you mean here. Harmonic theory is used to calculate the resonant freq, thus they go hand in hand, one doesn't cause the other, it is the same thing just viewed from different angles
A magnet with wire wrapped around it produces a "harmonic oscillator"?
what does this harmonic oscillator do?
ok before I carry on you are going to be entering a world of pain if you really want to get into magnetism. Some of the cleverest ppl I have ever met work in electromag, it is a subject not for the faint harted.
Anyway to just desquell a myth, someone eariler on said that magents
DONT have different freq responses. Well in actual fact they do and it is mainly down to their hysteresis of the B-H curves (rare-earth mags have the worst) , but that is a different story and I dont want to confuse ppl too much.
Now depending what kind of magnet is being used.
Say we had a soft-iron magnet. Wrap a wire around it and put some current through it will cause the soft-iron magnet to become magentised to the field of the coil, the presece of the soft-iron will increase the permeability of the magnetic cct (think of it as a scaling factor)
Air has a perm of 4*PI*10-7
Iron has a perm of many thousand times higher then free air. Thus by adding iron to yr magentic cct you can increase the flux density conciderably (but it comes and limitation naimly saturation)
Now say you put a normaliron core into the coil. A normal iron core keeps it flux (ie a magnet). Now IF oyu put current into the winding one way you will basically canel out the magnet filed of the core and thus the inductance of the coil is zero, the other way you re-inforce the field and teh inductance goes up.
You cannot use MAGNETS in cores for tuned ccts due to this effect (soft iron MUST be used).
Now you increase the flux and you will cross a magic threshlod and you will start to magnetise the core.
Now start using stonger magnets (rare-earth and such) and the same is still true, current one way will cancel the flux (more and field will flop) current the other way and the field will strengthen.
The difference with rare-earth is if the flux get too heigh then their field actually collapsed and it is no longer magentic (well maybe 1% of its original strength)
So that statement abt a magnet with a coil around it being a harmonic oscillator isnt really possible since it will dampen out any oscillation very easily due to the sever mis-symattry of inductance one way to the other.
A soft-iron core will basically be a large inductor, and with in a LRC cct it will resonate at a certain freq