EFElliott wrote:Danny, when I worked with Semie in '77-78 and 1983 building mostly Ventures model
reissues, all the pickups were wound the same direction, never any talk of trying to make
anything humcanceling, and out of phase was considered a bad thing that we had to fix.
Semie wanted that fuller, richer P-90-ish sound on the middle posision, not that thin nasally out of phase sound(witch I kind of like)most of the pickups then had 3 wires 2 off the coil and a ground off the magnets and pole pieces, we would just switch one of the coil wires around if one turned up out of phase,
you can't always do this with Mosrite pickups from the 60s that just have 2 leads,a black and white, like your 1964 pickup and most all 1960s Mosrite pickups the black begining wire out of the coil is soldered to a thin copper shielding plate between the coil and magnets, the nuts that hold the polepiece screws also rest on this copper shielding, when you reverse your wire on these chances are your pole piece will be hot, and when you touch them it'll sound like touchin' the end of your guitar cord.
Ed
Sorry to resurrect this old thread but I have the same issue with a Mosrite Combo that I just got--out of phase in the middle position.
Do you know if it's just a matter of desoldering the black wire from the plate and using that as the lead and then solder the white to the plate and using it as the ground? I've never seen a Mosrite pickup taken apart. The foam and resin make me hesitant. Any danger in damaging it by taking it apart to do that?