Thanks to a fellow HFCer's generosity, I have a loaner box of humbuckers to demo for my pseudo-Big Apple Strat modification of a Legacy I picked up fairly recently.
I've wired up a pickguard and have been swapping pickups in and out, but I wonder if I'm getting all that I could get out of their time installed.
I see pickup demos on YouTube, like everyone has, and unless they feature some ace player showing how much EVH sound they can get out of a non-EVH-endorsed pickup (for example ), they usually feature some clean picking and strumming, and some distorted picking and strumming, with maybe a stop in between. But what they're doing is showing off what the pickup can do, and I expect the amp/signal chain has been dialed in to show it off to advantage.
Of course when you decide on a pickup you want to dial in your sound(s), but isn't that a different task from comparing them? What I've been doing is that I set up a couple of amps, let's say Fender-y and Marshall-ish, to edge-of-breakup settings with one of my guitars equipped with moderate-output humbuckers rolled up wide open. I can pick it lightly for cleanish sounds, and bear down for breakup. I can step on a pedal for full-on distortion, too, but that way I'm hearing more of the pedal and less of the pickup, I feel.
Then I plug in the guitar with the demo pickups. I figure that way I can gauge the "hotness" of the pickup - if I have to roll it off to get clean sounds, it's hotter. If I have to roll it down quite a bit, it's quite a bit hotter, etc. I want to leave the amp settings untouched so as to try to narrow down the variables to just the pickup sound, but there are still other variables, pickup height being one of them. I have fooled with setups a bit, but I feel like I should stay away from customizing the setup for each pickup in order to keep the comparison to an apples-to-apples level.
Then I pull the pickguard, solder in new pickups, and try to remember what the last set sounded like compared with the current set.
Am I overcomplicating this process? Am I missing something that should be obvious? Is there a setting that is notoriously hard to get right and therefore separates the best pickups from the rest? How do YOU do it?
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mrjamiam
Thanks to a fellow HFCer's generosity, I have a loaner box of humbuckers to demo for my pseudo-Big Apple Strat modification of a Legacy I picked up fairly recently.
I've wired up a pickguard and have been swapping pickups in and out, but I wonder if I'm getting all that I could get out of their time installed.
I see pickup demos on YouTube, like everyone has, and unless they feature some ace player showing how much EVH sound they can get out of a non-EVH-endorsed pickup (for example
), they usually feature some clean picking and strumming, and some distorted picking and strumming, with maybe a stop in between. But what they're doing is showing off what the pickup can do, and I expect the amp/signal chain has been dialed in to show it off to advantage.
Of course when you decide on a pickup you want to dial in your sound(s), but isn't that a different task from comparing them? What I've been doing is that I set up a couple of amps, let's say Fender-y and Marshall-ish, to edge-of-breakup settings with one of my guitars equipped with moderate-output humbuckers rolled up wide open. I can pick it lightly for cleanish sounds, and bear down for breakup. I can step on a pedal for full-on distortion, too, but that way I'm hearing more of the pedal and less of the pickup, I feel.
Then I plug in the guitar with the demo pickups. I figure that way I can gauge the "hotness" of the pickup - if I have to roll it off to get clean sounds, it's hotter. If I have to roll it down quite a bit, it's quite a bit hotter, etc. I want to leave the amp settings untouched so as to try to narrow down the variables to just the pickup sound, but there are still other variables, pickup height being one of them. I have fooled with setups a bit, but I feel like I should stay away from customizing the setup for each pickup in order to keep the comparison to an apples-to-apples level.
Then I pull the pickguard, solder in new pickups, and try to remember what the last set sounded like compared with the current set.
Am I overcomplicating this process? Am I missing something that should be obvious? Is there a setting that is notoriously hard to get right and therefore separates the best pickups from the rest? How do YOU do it?
ETA: another pesky question.
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