That balance is backwards, you'll want the neck to have less output, because it's sampling a string that's vibrating more. For classic Tele twang, you don't want overwound - a good matching humbucker might be one of the low-powered Gretsch-style pickups. A LOT of people using that setup install a "trimpot" under the control plate - it's a screw-controlled potentiometer that can be used to balance the humbucker volume, you'll see a tiny extra hole drilled in the control plate for the screwdriver to fit through. I'm not sure what Keef does... :cool01:
Another approach is to utilize the imbalance, you have a low-volume twang and a high-volume roar, but that does make the middle positions useless. My fave stage setup is the opposite, a bridge HB for the Allman/Page/Santana thing, and a neck single for the Eric Johnson/SRV/Hendrix strat thing. I use concentric tone/volumes for each, but they won't fit in a conventional tele control slot, unless you go mini. Warmoth
can back-route a Tele, if you want more room to play in.
I would email Fralin when you're close to buying. In the meantime, start looking at the output values on mixed sets of Strat pickups available at DiMarzio, Duncan, everywhere. You can get some kind of idea about the relative balance of outputs that most people have found to work well.
(I personally will never put a humbucker more powerful than that Fralin on the neck, as the neck pickup's magnets affect sustain. This, and not simplemindedness, is what's actually behind those one-pickup guitars. Any sort of PAF-type, 7-8K is OK, but I've seen 17-horsepower Invaders and X2N's and L500XL's on the neck? Oh well, enough fuzztone can cure everything.)

arty07: