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I'm getting conflicting information as to whether the two halves of a P-bass pickup are configured so that they are noise cancelling, so

Are the pickups in standard P-basses (say a Fender American Standard if we need a specific model) designed to reduce/eliminate external noise?

Dave
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2 Answers2

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Yes. The "split coil" pickup (actually two separate pickups placed close together under the strings) is a humbucking, noise-cancelling design. These have been standard on the Fender Precision Bass since the early 1960s.

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Split-coil noise-canceling design

However, the original "vintage" Fender Precision Bass pickup is a single pickup with a single coil, and it is not noise-cancelling -- it is subject to 60-cycle hum electrical interference.

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Original 1950s P-Bass single-coil pickup (not noise-cancelling)

The original single-coil design is less popular, but it is favored by some traditionalists, notably Sting. Occasionally Fender will re-issue basses with this "vintage"-design pickup.

  • However, keep in mind that originally styled single-coil pickups for guitars (and therefore, basses) are available in noise-cancelling and humbucking flavors. For Fender, they're often referred to as noiseless. These pickups will vary slightly from their traditional counterparts, but share a similar, less noisy sound quality. –  May 21 '13 at 06:23
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Will's answer is precise, however keep in mind that this transformation of the Precision Bass really has lead to a few types of pickups common for P-Bass installation.

Different off-the-shelf P-Bass models could use traditional, 60-year old single coils, a split single coil that may or may not be hum-cancelling through reverse-would reverse-polarity wiring, straight beefy humbuckers (sometimes using two Jazz Bass pickups stacked together, also reverse-wound from each other) or even a jazz bass pickup that may be noiseless or not.