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The Pole Position Sliding Pickup System is relevant to the field of musical instruments, in particular the electric guitar. It is relevant both to live performance and to recording in providing increased tonal variety from electric guitars.
The Pole Position Sliding Pickup System allows an electric guitar player to get more tonal variety from his/her instrument than is currently possible by allowing the instrument's pickup to be easily positioned in numerous positions, and changed as often as desired. This is a complete change from the current system of fixed-position pickups which can only offer a set number of tonal options based on where the pickups are affixed to the guitar body.
The placement of pickup on an electric guitar body (from only one pickup in the earliest electric guitar models to two or three pickups in later models) has always been as important to the sound of an electric guitar as other features, such as the wood it is made of, the method used to construct it, and even the type of strings used.
Pickup locations long ago became standard. In essence, a pickup placed close to the base of the neck will generate a duller tone, whereas a pickup placed closer to the bridge will create a brighter tone. Many electric guitar models place their pickup(s) in these areas in order to offer players two distinct sounds. Models that have a third pickup placed in between these two can still only offer the player a fraction of the available sounds that can be gotten from the space between the bridge and the base of the neck.
The Pole Position Sliding Pickup System is designed to allow electric guitar players quick, easy access to greater tonal variety by making the pickup movable to any desired position between the neck and the bridge rather than tying it to any single position, thereby limiting what it can do.
The body cavity created for the pickup would be somewhat larger than current cavities in order to make room for the rails that the pickup would “ride” on when the user slides it into the desired position.
The user would be able to slide the pickup using a single finger, even while continuing to play. Because the slider handle is conveniently placed where a player strums/picks the strings, it is more convenient than conventional pickup switches, which are generally placed at the far bottom or far top of an electric guitar.