Moving forward, I'm epoxying the cores into the flatwork. The steel cores have been shot with Krylon rattle-can clear, but I'll additionally tape them with Kapton tape (thanks to David King for that suggestion, and other tips, as well) before winding to avoid shorts. To gang the coils, I will use another piece of laminate for the baseplate.
Each bridge coil will get about 5000-6000 turns of 42 gauge wire, and about 4000-5000 each on the neck. They'll be powered by a row of 1/2" x 1/8" x 1/8" neodymium magnet blocks on the bottoms of the cores. I'm going to wire these as 4-wire 'buckers so they can be coil split: 26 gauge stranded black, white, red, and green (according to one manufacturer or another's color-coding). The cores will also need a ground. I will eschew the shielded 4-wire cable for twisted leads, which offers some effective shielding, and well-shielded and grounded cavities.
So, my question is pretty simple: will this work?
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Does a pickup need to have a metal baseplate with a ground wire? Is there any special way I should ground the steel cores?
Thanks again to David King for a lot of technical advice along the way, and John Sonksen for material and moral support!