Share your pickups

I got
Strat: Seymour Duncan Antiquity Jazz Neck/ Antiquity Humbucker PAF bridge and love em, my fav.
Strat: Bare Knuckle 59 slab board and are a great ol strat sound IMO
Tele: 59 Klein and the bridge got that twang and neck got some sparkle.
VIP: Bare Nuckle Humbucker size P90s a Manhattan in the kneck and Blue Note in the bridge... haven't tried them yet but going for a jazz sound
 
Warmoth ash strat has Roadhouse 65s neck and middle and a Bareknuckle Mule in the bridge. It's the most versatile guitar I've owned. Beautiful range and the Mule sits perfectly in ballsy paf land. That pickup can do damn near everything.
My mahogany strat has Sheptone Tribute humbuckers and they sound glorious.  So juicy.
I've become a huge fan of lower output pickups and get my grind from pedals and my amp.  But that's me. :)
 
Cagey said:
You can't (or, at least shouldn't) glue a neck to a body that doesn't have a joint designed for that. That means anything designed for a bolt-on neck is off limits for glue. You'll get a much tighter (and sustain-encouraging) joint out of a bolt-on that's had threaded inserts installed anyway.

As for other neck suggestions that apply to what you're looking for, you might consider an Ebony over Pau Ferro part. Burnish the whole thing and put some stainless (or gold) frets on there and it's just sex on a stick. Best neck you'll ever play. Super fast. Same could be said for an Ebony over roasted Maple or an all roasted Maple neck, but it might be just a tad brighter. Of course, you have EQ controls on your guitar, sfx, amps and mixer(s) for recorders or the PA system so if something is too edgy/bright, there are numerous ways to soften it up.

Thanks for the advice:)
 
I've been a bit boring and put the same Lace Alumatones bassbar on both my basses, and an Alumatone j-style pickup, which I wouldn't recommend, I'd go for a bassbar which you can, err... tap(?) to give a j-style style. And you can get the option of a more fuller sound untapped.

For my Esquire I went for a Don Mare "The 3-Speed StangRay" from their website 5.4-1st tap, 6.4-2nd tap, 7.8-3rd tap. So it's got quite a bit of variety. Sounds good, but I can't say I compared it to a standard Fender/Squier pickup, sorry.

Not a great video/playing but it'll give you some idea of the taps, and with a little bit of drive.  :evil4:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=afv6Sa4XhJk[/youtube]
 
thin-string guitars: something from the House of Lollar

basses:

- soapbars: Honey Badger's Heavy Hitters is my first choice for non-vintage applications

- Jbass: Honey Badger Jbass split-coils

- Pbass: this depends ... traditional P gets a Honey Badger P, but when I want something that has a bigger bottom and mid clarity I use a Heavy Hitters style P set
 
PRS S2 Standard... Seymour Duncan Pegasus and Sentient set...  Coil Split
Warmoth Tele... Seymour Duncan Blues Saraceno and A Duncan 59
Schecter Omen... Seymour Duncan Pearly Gates and a Duncan Custom
Schecter Kenny Hickey Baritone... A Sustaniac and A Duncan JB (I believe)
Schecter C1 Hellraiser... A Sustaniac and a EMG
PRS 30th Anniversary Custom 24... Stock.

 
I'm gonna leave my Bari-Tele the way it is, but on my main shredstix ala my TFS6 & my Ibby 7, I'm a paycheck or so away from switching to EMG 57's in the bridge, and an SV in the neck TFS with a 66-7 in neck of the Ibby.

You'd think that at 50 years old, I'd be the guy switching from actives to passives, but I'm loving what I'm hearing from these 57's with regard to the detail that I can get out of them, but combine that with a high gain amp setup, and I get the best of both worlds.

The 81 is what kept me loathing actives for the longest time, and I've heard them in a variety of axes as I've installed numerous sets of them for customers.

With the 57/66, you get all the wonderful qualities of an underwound, just turned up like I wanted.
 
Here are some new ones I got:

4CF88CF9-421B-4788-A7D1-9894C683355C_zpsq0lj88xp.jpg


Seymour Duncan Custom Shop.

All three are Stack Plus construction, best noiseless single coils there are in my opinion.

The neck and middle pickups are based on the Psychedelic Strat set, which is a late 60s style set. Think Fender CS69.

The bridge pickup is based on the SSL-5, which is famously the bridge pickup in Gilmour's black Strat.

However, all three are wound with silver wire instead of copper and, since they're designed for a build that's going to have gold hardware, the pole pieces are gold-plated.

Haven't tried them yet!
 
It all depends on the build and the sound you want to get...

I use Fender Custom Shop, Rio Grande and Seymour Duncan pickups. 
 
TonyFlyingSquirrel said:
I'm gonna leave my Bari-Tele the way it is, but on my main shredstix ala my TFS6 & my Ibby 7, I'm a paycheck or so away from switching to EMG 57's in the bridge, and an SV in the neck TFS with a 66-7 in neck of the Ibby.

You'd think that at 50 years old, I'd be the guy switching from actives to passives, but I'm loving what I'm hearing from these 57's with regard to the detail that I can get out of them, but combine that with a high gain amp setup, and I get the best of both worlds.

The 81 is what kept me loathing actives for the longest time, and I've heard them in a variety of axes as I've installed numerous sets of them for customers.

With the 57/66, you get all the wonderful qualities of an underwound, just turned up like I wanted.

^^Exactly. Focusing on the 81/85 has been a marketing mistake for EMG. Plus the fact that they tell people to set up their pickups in a way that is preferable for "MAXIMUM METULLLLLL!!!!!!"

Once I found the sweet spot for my 85x/SLVx/58x I found that, between the pickups and the SPC/EXG combo, I could get just about any sound I wanted out of the guitar.

I have since put EMGs in almost every guitar I own.
 
SD WLH or 59 bridge is my go to PAF tone. Seth Lover or A2P, either with A3 mag or stock A2, is my go to PAF neck.

Dimarzio Cruiser or Area pickups for Strat. If not noiseless, Fender CS 69. For bridge, either Chopper, JB, CC, or 59/Custom Hybrid.

Go to for modern distorted tones, I like BKP. Miracle Man bridge and Cold Sweat neck, or Warpig bridge and Afterman neck. Haven't tried anything else but not really interested except maybe Holy Diver.

SD Custom for pretty much anything in between: from punk to alternative, from Indy to garage. Jazz or Full Shred for neck mainly for cleans.
 
House of Tones Steel House Alnico 8 Humbucker in my HSS guitar. Has a really crisp sound when distorted that I've seen so far.
 
I have Lollar Regals in my first Warmoth build. Couldn't be happier!
I had the stock Japanese humbuckers in my previous guitar and always quite liked them, but the Lollars blow them away for dynamics and individual string clarity.
 
In my guitars:

1980s Fender Stratocaster 57 reissue. Stock standard Strat pickups. Gotta take pickguard off and see if there's anything special about them. In the in-between positions of 2 & 4 they are great sounding for that Texas Blues sound.

1990s Epiphone Casino. Stock P90s. In bridge position it rocks out but overall I can't get into this guitar, feels so sterile to me. My guitar repairer thinks it's a great guitar. I've been thinking of swapping out P90s for the Kinmans to see if that changes my mind.... It gets The Beatles tone for sure, but my overall experience with this guitar has made me wary of looking at ES styled guitars in future. Just the feel of it...I can't explain why, sorry. Neck? Body shape? Body thickness? I'm not sure.

Warmoth #1 Telecaster. First Warmoth I assembled. Has an old Tele L series bridge pickup & a 1970s Guild Humbucker in the neck position. The huge disparity in the balance of the pickup outputs has been resolved by incorporating an EMG ABC blend pot (buffered inputs) instead of 3 way blade switch. A 3 knob Tele... No blade switch. I have had these pickups since 1970s & NO WAY will I part with them. The bridge pickup can squawk and bitch on in high gain amp configurations and twang with the best too. The Guild humbucker is the closest I have to a PAF sounding humbucker. Will melt your face off with buttery goodness on high volume lead applications.

Warmoth # 2 Jazzmonster. Bill Lawrence L500 neck & bridge positions. All sorts of issues with this assembly. Picked the wrong body wood and neck combination and it made the natural reflective sound too brittle and tight.  Maple body, maple neck & ebony fretboard.....I wouldn't recommend that. I went down the path of using active EMGs to control the tone & use active EQs but the EMG pickups were too sterile adding to the problem..... Used EMG 89s too, which also had issues with what height to set the pickup - for single coil, operation or humbucker operation....unless there's plenty of natural harmonics flying around to smooth out the inaccuracy of the pickup height these pickups aren't the best for a job of solving issues with a guitar....I needed a flat response, QUIET type of pickup. I did ask here & got told Bill Lawrence L500. I already had one from years before so I got another and the consistency of the build of the pickups between the 2 eras is uncannily close.  With Bill's finest thrown in, I added an EMG ABC Blend Control and a EMG Treble & Bass EQ active system and that enabled me to set the pickups up well and now very workable. Underneath the pickguard is a DaVinci Code's worth of puzzling wiring that is not professionally wired up. But it works and I am reluctant to delve back in there again!  :eek:

Warmoth#3 Carved Top Tele (see avatar pic)..... Kent Armstrong Firebird Mini Humbuckers, neck & bridge positions.Saw the neck on Showcase, had to have it (we've all been there, right?  :icon_thumright: ), got the body built custom.... looks like a real princess of a guitar but again, there's issues. Warmoth routed the control cavities in the traditional Gibson Les Paul style and not the more open shape. As the CT Tele body was new to Warmoth at that time, I'm not sure if I didn't spec it out for the more open cavity or they just routed the trad shape in. I'm not blaming them but the reality caused issues.The routing channel between the upper bout of the body (where the switch is) and the control cavity is incredibly narrow and if you start using active electronics, it becomes a nightmare trying to engineer ways to get the wiring through. Anything more than 3 wires requires some magic and a heap of lubricant....swearing helps too. By the time I got to this instrument, Seymour Duncan had got around to releasing the Blackout Modular Preamp. This means you can run the pickups of your choice into the BMP and then make the system active. The BMP has an EQ'd tone shaping preamp section... You have to have four conductor wired pickups and two pickups only. If you have a Strat you have to forget this option or engineer some crafty way of getting 3 pickups to work in a buffer/preamp that is designed for two. I had 2 Kent Armstrong Firebird Mini Humbuckers and ran that through the Seymour Duncan BMP. These Firebird pickups are very close to authentic sound of original Firebirds (I once owned one of those) but here's the rub. If you want that Heavy Metal djent sound that you often seen associated with Seymour Duncan Blackout systems, you really have to crank the snot out of the amp preamp stage to get it. While the Firebird pickups are inherently mild humbuckers, the BMP system doesn't alter it too much unless you go into heavy gain applications. I feel SD made a marketing mistake when they released this BMP by having all these hard rock & HM videos promoting the system. It does just fine on clean guys.... I am considering swapping out the BMP for a 18v Bartolini system if I can ever make head or tail of their website as to what system is best for a guitar.... With the two other Warmoths using 18v EMG systems, it makes sense to use 18v across the board in all active loaded guitars. The BMP does NOT like 18 volts. 9 volts ONLY.

As you can see, my pickup selections are eclectic and I have detailed the reasoning behind it so folks can see that sometimes there is not just a case of slapping in any ole pickup and it sounds instantly great.  It's quite funny seeing the Jazzmonster cranked up, the L500 can blow doors off cars, especially if you scoop out the Bass & Treble EQs & place the boost into +6dB territory.....but it looks like a surf guitar  :icon_biggrin: .
 
My go-to's are Jim Wagner PUPs, in particular Godwood in the bridge and a Crossroads in the neck.  Warm, sweet and full.
 
guitarslinger said:
My go-to's are Jim Wagner PUPs, in particular Godwood in the bridge and a Crossroads in the neck.  Warm, sweet and full.
I can second this as I have an orig set of Goodwoods. Have a build planned for them.
 
Guitars:
- 1998 Paul Reed Smith CE24MT -- whatever the stock coverless humbuckers were
- 1985 Yamaha SE200 -- Seymour Duncan Vintage Rails
- 1968 Vox Phantom - stock
- 1984 Roland G-303 -- bridge pickup is stock, neck pickup is a Bill Lawrence dul-blade humbucker with a coil-cut switch
- 2007 Ibanez AF-75 -- stock...but I'm looking for suggestions to upgrade!

Basses:
- 1982 Steinberger L-2 -- stock EMG humbuckers
- 1988 Modulus Graphite Quantum-6 SPX -- EMG J-type
- 1996 Warmoth/Dolan 8-string -- EMG J-type
- 2008 Lakland Skyline 55-02D -- stock LH3
- 2015 Warmoth fretless 5-string -- Bartolini MV52CBJD quad-coil humbucker
- 2007 Rob Allen MB-2 -- stock Fishman bridge
- 1985 Schecter Venus B/4 -- stock Schecter "Monstertone" J-type
 
Through the years I owned several guitars with several pickups. I had a Japanese Stratocaster, loaded with a Texas Special set. It sounded very good, but a little too noisy and not powerfull enough for my needs. I play almost all styles of music, but finally I'm a hard rock lover  :guitarplayer2:
I had a Yamaha where I put a DiMarzio Super Distortion. One of the best humbucker that I ever tried. I love it! Sounds really fat and powerfull. I tried D-Activator and Breed humbuckers from DiMarzio, that was too modern-sounding to my ears.
From Seymour Duncan I tried the JB, in bridge. It sounds really cool in almost all the ways. You can go from nice crunchy sounds to heavy metal riff with no problems. The Custom 5 is quite the same I thought but with a little bit different voicing. The pickup has more personality. Some people like it, some other not.
For all really-heavy-metal the SH6 Distortion from Seymour Duncan is the best pickup I tried. Sounds really really mean, with a lot of presence and a nice "wall of sound" effect. Quite similar to the DiMarzio Super Distortion but more modern sounding and more brutal. For death or black metal the Seymour Duncan Black Winter is excellent, very similar to a SH6 but a little more hairy and with a really specific voicing. It sounds awesome but can do nothing good but death-black-grind-thrash-metal.

I sold all my guitars to make my Warmoth custom superstrat, so I needed a set of pickups for both nice crystal clear clean sounds and heavy metal mean sounds. I chose EMG, for different reasons. First the silence (yes, choosing pickups for the silence :icon_biggrin:  ). Absolutely no unwanted noises. Second reason is that I have the project of putting piezo bridge on my guitar, and the EMGs don't need to be grounded. Last reason is that they are pretty good in almost all the style of playing.
I chose two EMG SA singlecoils for neck and middle position. Sounds like a strat, no doubt about it. Crystal clear sounding with a lot of harmonics and a really good definition of the notes. For the bridge I bought a EMG 89 humbucker, wich is basically a EMG 85 high output humbucker with a EMG SA near to it. Selecting by push/pull tone pot. The humbucker mode is awesome for things from classic rock to heavy or thrash metal, and selecting the singlecoil mode make it sounds like a nice stratocaster.

I think, for my need of playing everything with one single guitar, this set is the best I can get, and I'm pretty happy with it  :eek:ccasion14:
 
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