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| - Pickup selection, wiring, technical questions & other guitar hardware discussion here. |
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#1 |
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Yarrrrrr
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Bed Sty, Brooklyn, Ny
Posts: 1,291
Real Name: dAN
Rig: ?
Thanked: 14
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High Power pickups vs. Vintage style
So somebody explain to me why having a high output pickup is better than having a lower output pickup and turning up the gain? Because I just installed a pair of Dimarzio PAF's in one of my 6's and found that it sounds fantastic clean in full humbucking mode, which I have not gotten out of other pickups, and if i just turn up my gain a bit more, it's well.. perfect. I mean it's not super metal gain, but that's just because I don't have a high-gain amp and my pedal is more of a Marshall-style distortion. I imagine that in front of something like a Recto that it would probably sound just as hot... But then... there's got to be a reason people use hotter pickups all the time nowadays. I'm just not sure what i'm missing.
All these thoughts are occuring to me because I've never gotten a clean tone from a humbucker in any guitar i've played like i'm getting from these pickups, and I am tempted to put PAFs in my 7 and well... every guitar ever? The DS7 and AN7 sound good with gain but it seems that the high end is much more rounded with these pickups, and the cleans are just so much nicer and more articulate. I would never play any kind of clean arpeggios on those higher output pups. I'm just a bit.. thrown off Thoughts? Opinions? |
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#2 |
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Lazy Basterd
![]() Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Port Orange, FL
Posts: 4,495
Main Seven: Schecter C7 Blackjack
Rig: Laney GH50L & GT8
Thanked: 11
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Pickups depend a lot on the rest of your gear, and the sound you're going for. A hot bridge pickup(with a boost or without) into a driven amp sounds and reacts differently than a PAF into a high gain amp with the gain up high. Some people prefer one to the other.
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#3 |
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Dirty Lurker
Posts: n/a
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I find that the high gain often has better midrange and that vintage often has to much bass
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#4 |
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ss.org Regular
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Stockton, CA
Posts: 843
Real Name: Max
Main Seven: Lefty Schecter 007 Elite
Rig: Toneport
Thanked: 6
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i've always wondered this too.
i just put an x2n7 in my guitar, and its a pretty high output pickup. maybe one of these days i'll have to buy a PAF or PAF pro and pop it in the bridge, and make sound samples. |
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#5 |
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Yarrrrrr
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Bed Sty, Brooklyn, Ny
Posts: 1,291
Real Name: dAN
Rig: ?
Thanked: 14
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I just wish I understood the logic behind it, so I could make a better judgement call. I mean obviously if one pickup sounds better, people are gonna go for it. I just don't get why the higher output pickups would have certain properties that another pickup wouldn't.
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#6 | |
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grumpy old man
![]() Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Virginia, USA
Posts: 775
Main Seven: Ibanez LACS RG7
Thanked: 8
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Quote:
for example, high output from the guitar will slam an amp's input stage harder, which can result in nice distortion. but gain stages in the amp are after the input stage and usually after the EQ, so a low output pickup + amp gain cranked will sound different because you're boosting things at a different point in the chain. the problem with your question is that "sounds better" is a subjective thing that's different for everybody. i like the high-output pickup + not tons of amp gain, but many folks [like Korn] prefer the low-output pickup + tons of amp gain. Korn actually uses PAF7s in the bridge position, just like what you've tried and liked. so if it's working for you, hell yeah try PAF7s in all your guitars. _actual time_ : prog/math/metal/???? on myspace |
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#7 |
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what?!?
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: singapore
Posts: 131
Real Name: dani
Main Seven: esp vp230-sl7 vw
Thanked: 5
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without taking the magnet, wire type, construction methods and materials into consideration, a higher output pickup has more wind than that of a vintage output pickup.
more wind = higher dc resistance and in turn produces more mids and less highs. a vintage output pickup actually has lesser mids thus the bass and treble are pretty much up front. its not necessary bassier than a high output pickup but you hear the bass and treble more because of the lack of mids. high output pickups was designed to get more drive out of low gain amps back in the 70s. well, high gain amps wasn't invented back then. since high gain amps are dime a dozen these days, high output pickups may actually oversaturate the gain stages resulting in mush. i believe a scoop sounding vintage output pickup into a high gain amp should give better tonal control at gig volume since amps add quite a fair amount of mids to the overall tone. if higher gain is desired, a transparent booster can be used to slam the front of the amp. of course, ymmv. different strokes for different folks. it started out with high output pickups into low gain amps and then the advent of high gain amps resulted in many using them with their existing high output pickups. nowadays, more are using low to medium output pickups into high gain amps for more control. so i guess the best way is to try all three and see what works for you. |
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