-
Originally Posted by jorgemg1984
-
03-28-2024 03:28 PM
-
Originally Posted by Jimmy Smith
These days, I actually am at a point where I'm done modding. If a guitar or amp doesn't sound good enough to buy, it certainly doesn't sound good enough to buy and mod. You can't turn a tele into a Les Paul with a couple of humbuckers. Or a Gretsch into an ES-125 with a neck P90. I usually try to steer people towards that mindset, if they are looking for some crazy change. But yeah, you want it a little warmer? Turn down the treble on the amp, or the tone on the guitar, lower K volume pot helps a little. Sure, you could try a different pickup... but be careful to not waste too much time and money, when you might have the wrong guitar or amp for the sound you want.
-
Originally Posted by Jimmy Smith
-
Originally Posted by ruger9
I have a 10 percent overwound Biltoft HS-90 that I bought with all the sets of magnets he has available. The best combo I found was an A3 and an A5 in that pickup before yanking it out because I like the compression of a humbucker better. I tried A2, A2/A5, A3, A3/A5, and A5 before going back to the A3/A5. Never did get to the ceramic 8's but the A3/A5 indeed had a rounder or softer attack less inclined to harshness in the highs while maintaining the note definition pretty well. Even though I didn't keep it in a guitar, hey I only got two, it was an interesting experiment.
All this stuff is so insanely variable which makes it all a guessing and testing game then you get guys who throw the "it's gotta be ROUGH CAST" into the magnet equation. Pretty much why I always fall back on the 57's cause experimenting is too much money and too time consuming if you are going through a dozen pickups....especially in an ES haha.
-
Originally Posted by ruger9
-
Originally Posted by jorgemg1984
-
Originally Posted by DawgBone
-
Originally Posted by jorgemg1984
-
Originally Posted by ruger9
-
Originally Posted by ruger9
-
Originally Posted by ruger9
-
Originally Posted by jorgemg1984
-
Originally Posted by Jimmy Smith
-
That's max bright for the guitar lol. I set up the controls to have some upper range and still be able to chirp a tad but while being smoky. If you want it warmer, simply roll off the tone a tad or eq the amp warmer. It was also recorded with a condenser mic which is way brighter than a dynamic mic.
-
Originally Posted by Jimmy Smith
That was a nice warm tone. That's a Strat? What amp are you using?
Thanks for posting.
PD
-
Thx. The amp was a Peavey Classic 20 played thru a lil 8 inch open back cab. The guitar was a warmoth hardtail strat.
-
Originally Posted by Jimmy Smith
-
Wat!
-
Originally Posted by Jimmy Smith
Speaking of getting your tone calibrated through a 'knowledgeable' tone gurus it also depends. What you hear in your head is not necessarily what you think it is. I recently modded my tele for two humbuckers, and I the neck one I was very happy with SD Jazz right away, but the bridge I got JB and i didn't like it. I always thought this swamp ash thinline tele needed more mid oriented pickups, and i tried a few and didn't sound like what i hear in my head, So then i thought maybe i'm all wrong and should go a different direction. And boom, SD 59 in the bridge instantly had the sound I was looking for, and it's mid scooped! The lesson is trial and error is only way to go unfortunately. 'Cos it cost $$!
-
John, can you say what pickups the aA2 and the A5 were?
For example, a Seymour Duncan 59 or?
-
I have both in my Heritage H535 LTD the neck is AlNiCo 5 , the Bridge 2 . both seymour duncans . Great combo as the warmer 2 softens the bridge a bit to a for me more usable tone.
-
It's easy and inexpensive to swap magnet type, especially with pickups with no covers.
Magnet Change.
Tone Change.
-
Originally Posted by Tal_175
Interestingly, with the SD, I had to wire the ground to hot and the hot to ground to avoid OOP. Luckily no noise issues though!
-
Originally Posted by ruger9
-
Originally Posted by ruger9
NGD - Slamann Super 400 with CC pick up
Today, 03:10 PM in Guitar, Amps & Gizmos