Re: Hexaphonic Pickup Project
Posted: Thu May 30, 2013 10:18 pm
A coil does not act like an antenna but it will pickup some EM field radiation, but in an entirely different manor to an antenna. However, the signal that is picked up is not common mode. As I said, if the amplifier is close to the coil (you mentioned in the pickup with the coil), then the common mode pickup is close to zero, for most cases. If you are trying to use the guitar in a high EM field environment, then common mode pick might be an issue, but you'll have other issues that will out weigh the common mode.
Differential pickups are designed such that the coil without a magnet in the core detects the signals that the other coil with the magnet picks up in addition to the variable reluctance derived signal from the string movement. This is not common mode with regard a differential op-amp.
Cancelling in this way is hard because no matter where the cancelling coil is located it will be in a different place from the desired pickup, will be wound different and will have different coil characteristics because the core material is different. You best bet might be to have a method to adjust the cancelling signal level on an individual basis and allow for null cancelling.
A low impedance coil will give better results since it will be intrinsically less susceptible to picking up the background signals. Since you are worried about the characteristics of pickups with large turn count (L, C and R), this would be a good route for you to take. Whist some designs use a current transformer, you could use a single turn and an current detector - either a sense resistor, or an active device such as a hall sensor for example.
If you are really brave with the DSP, you could use a steered correlation algorithm to remove the back ground noise from the signal of interest using the null coil signal for steering.
Differential pickups are designed such that the coil without a magnet in the core detects the signals that the other coil with the magnet picks up in addition to the variable reluctance derived signal from the string movement. This is not common mode with regard a differential op-amp.
Cancelling in this way is hard because no matter where the cancelling coil is located it will be in a different place from the desired pickup, will be wound different and will have different coil characteristics because the core material is different. You best bet might be to have a method to adjust the cancelling signal level on an individual basis and allow for null cancelling.
A low impedance coil will give better results since it will be intrinsically less susceptible to picking up the background signals. Since you are worried about the characteristics of pickups with large turn count (L, C and R), this would be a good route for you to take. Whist some designs use a current transformer, you could use a single turn and an current detector - either a sense resistor, or an active device such as a hall sensor for example.
If you are really brave with the DSP, you could use a steered correlation algorithm to remove the back ground noise from the signal of interest using the null coil signal for steering.