banner

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

A2Ps Vs PGs in a Gibson LP

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • A2Ps Vs PGs in a Gibson LP

    Hey guys.

    I'm starting thinking about replacing the pups in my Gibson LP Standard. I'm using the LP at its 1st band practise tomorrow, so I'll have more of an idea about what I like and dislike about the pickups.

    The main 2 pups I thought about were an A2P set or a PG set.

    Tattooed Carrot has a fine looking set of Double Cream PG's for Sale, and I'm sure Blackrose could hook me up with some A2P's if I asked him nicely But I'm just not sure about which to get.

    I play mainly 60's and 70's style classic rock and blues. Any opinions, and pros/cons of these pickups would be a big help.

    Thanx for any opinions.

    Craig

  • #2
    Hey Brow....the only on of those pups I haven't tried is the PG bridge. I have the APH set in my Hardtail currently, and I just took out the PG(n). I also had the PG(n) in my double fat strat before replacing it with an APH.

    My assessment is that the PG is wound to enhance certain mid frequencies (to my ears mainly the upper mids but subtly lower mids as well). To me that's what gives it that "sizzle" that SD advertises. It's not a bad sound at all, just different. The bass response is also not quite as full as the APH to me. The neck especially has a really nice clean sound, and works well split. As mentioned, I haven't tried the bridge. In the neck of my strat it sounded really nice for all forms of rock and blues, no matter how overdriven. In the neck of my hardtail it was too dark and not articulate enough, especially overdriven..... although the clean was always slightly dard as well. It just didn't match for my taste.

    The APH's have the mids just slightly pulled back and to my ears have slightly enhanced lows. Very "evenly balanced" as the site says. Simply the sweetest humbuckers I have ever heard, followed very closely by the Seth. I knew I would love the neck pickup since I had one in the strat. The neck is super sweet and buttery smooth clean, really nice for rythym work and distorted lead work. Classic Slash lead tone. My biggest suprise was the bridge. I took a chance ordering it and absolutely love it. It also has a great clean voice, and will handle as much OD as you throw at it. The bridge will do anything IMO except full metal onslaught (and it may do that, I just don't have the equipment). Both positions retain great clarity without being overly bright.

    I picked the APH over the PG due to the extra sweetness and smooth clarity. It's a great base from which to build almost any rock sound. If you have found that an A5 magnet is slightly to bright and focused for you, then the APH is the ticket. From my point of view I would like to have to add treble as necessary to enhance the sound, not fight it constantly. If something is naturally too bright to me, turning down the treble seems to muffle the sound a bit, decreasing the clarity. With the APH, the clarity is there....and you can always get more treble if you really want it.

    If you wanted some sort of rough sound sample let me know....I don't have any plans tonight or tomorrow. I could throw something together really quickly.

    Just my $.02.
    My Sound Clips

    Comment


    • #3
      jeffs been around here a while and i respect his opinion, but i like the pgs much better

      i use my blues jr most of the time and i run all the eq full up. the pgs cut thru a band so well while when i tried the aph it was much less punchy. the aph has more bottom end and is much smoother sounding than the pgs though.
      im sure with some gear the aph works better, but not my gear. think mid 90s era warren haynes if your hip to him.
      the bridge has a smooth but strong top end with good bite, great punchy mids that have a growl to them and a bottom end thats big enough to give a full sound but not so big as to be tubby or muddy. i think it pushes the amp mich nicer than the aph
      the pgn has a warm top end with plenty of upper mids that give it great clarity and punch for such a warm pup.

      Comment


      • #4
        I tried the alnico 2 pro bridge, and while it sounded very warm played clean, I couldn't get into it's distorted sound, I found it bassy for my taste. I'd vote for PGs as well.

        Of course, it's all different strokes for different folks.
        Originally posted by Pink Unicorn Horsey
        Dumbness on massive idiocy with the stupid dumb-dumbnity of ridiculous WTFation in the dumbass of you-idiot.
        Originally posted by Sosomething
        "How do I improve the tone of my ThrasherKidzz-O-Blaster combo??"

        The answer is always "burn it, dumbass."

        Comment


        • #5
          Thanx for the replies guys

          Jeff_H, is there any chance you would be able to do a quick clip of the APH bridge? I have the MP3's you posted of the APH neck ,and I absolutely love the tone you get! But I've never heard a APH bridge, so any help would be appreciated

          I have a PGn in my Epiphone LP at the minute and I love it's tone too, but sometimes I find it's bass to be a bit 'boomy'. Altho that could be its height maybe?

          1 neck pickup tone that I would love to be able to get close to would be 'Still Got The Blues' by Gary Moore. For this I assume a APH would be better because it is smoother?

          Thanx for the opinions guys. Anyone else have anything to add?

          Craig

          Comment


          • #6
            Brow -

            I posted a few short clips of the APH bridge in my hardtail. Here's the link.

            APH II Bridge Demo
            My Sound Clips

            Comment


            • #7
              Hey Brow - I was in the same dilemma. Got a Les-Paul and didn't like the burst bucker pros in there. It was a toss-up between the APHs and the PGs and I opted for the PGs (with nickle covers) as I love Warren Haynes mid 90s tones. They were delivered this morning! I've now got to get my tech to fit them, so I'll post my review as soon as I've heard them. Can't wait!
              I'll give you everything but my guitar and my car

              Comment


              • #8
                I would advise the PGs too .

                The A2Ps are great PUs but I prefer the PGs in a LP, brighter and more harmonics.

                I prefer the A2Ps in a lighter weight/brighter guitar, I have them in a CU22
                Pickups used :
                Les Paul: A2'59/'PGn ; SP90-1/SP90-1
                PRS Santana 1: Phat Cats
                PRS CU22 : SLb/'59n ; A2'59b/PGn ; Phat Cats
                PRS McCarty : A2P/A2P ; SL/SL
                PRS Singlecut : Ant/Ant ; SLb/59n
                PRS Modern Eagle : SLb/Antn
                PRS Hollow : Ant/Ant
                PRS Mc Soap : SP90-1/SP90-3 ;SP90-1/SP90-1/SP90-3
                PRS Mc Deluxe : Antiquity II minis
                Strat : APS1TwBg/APS1rwrp/APS1T; APS1TwBg/SSL1rwrp/SSL1;Antiquity II Set;Antiquity Texas Hot Set
                Teles : 59b/PGn ; Ant set ; JDb/SSL1rwrp/SSL1
                SG : SP90-1/SP90-1

                Comment


                • #9
                  if you find the pgn to be boomy some times, then i wouldnt try the aph, it has a bigger bottom end

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Hey again guys.

                    Thanx for all the posts.

                    Spidey, I'm interested to hear what you think to the PG's in your LP. Would you PM me with your opinions please?

                    I've listened to the clips Jeff_H posted using his A2P bridge pup and I love the tone he gets.

                    I'm still mulling this over in my head, so any other opinions are appreciated.

                    Thanx again.

                    Craig

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Hi Craig - no problem, as soon as they are in and I've had chance to try them I'll post my thoughts.
                      I'll give you everything but my guitar and my car

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        I think quite highly of Jeff, but my tastes on this issue is different than his. I would go for PG's. If a round tone is important to you, you can always wash off some of the edge with the tone control. Decrease the tone on your guitar to 7-8 (with linear pots), and increase the highs on your amp! Good old trick. It would not do exactly what A2P's do, yet close.

                        By the way you might wanna check the antiquities/seths as well. They are in the same territory, but have more dimensionality due to being non-wax potted.

                        Good Luck.
                        FaceBook; SoundCloud; Barlo's Blues; Barlo Digitalized; Soundclick!;

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          I gotta add, I think PGs are the best wax-potted PAF replicase ever made. My humble opinion that's all.

                          B
                          FaceBook; SoundCloud; Barlo's Blues; Barlo Digitalized; Soundclick!;

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Thanx for the replies guys.

                            Dr Barlo, I did originally think about getting a set of Seths for my LP, but after speaking to SimonF about it and hearing his comments about the lack of bass in the bridge pup I kinda ruled them out.

                            Although, I s'ppose its another option for me to look into

                            Craig

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Brow
                              Thanx for the replies guys.

                              Dr Barlo, I did originally think about getting a set of Seths for my LP, but after speaking to SimonF about it and hearing his comments about the lack of bass in the bridge pup I kinda ruled them out.

                              Although, I s'ppose its another option for me to look into

                              Craig
                              Actually Craig, I'm back on the Seths big time now.

                              It's not so much that the Seth bridge model lacks bass, but the bass is softer and less defined than on some other pickups I've played. I put a C5 in the bridge position for a while, had much stronger bass, but I missed the sweetness and character of the Seth, so I put the Seth back and spent more time tweaking my amp's EQ. The Seth neck model is a no brainer for me - best neck HB I've ever played. The bridge model has taken me longer to dial in, possibly because I'd never played an A2 bridge pickup before. Also bear in mind that I play mostly through a Jubilee, which is quite a bright amp with some quirky tone controls. With the mids and bass boosted, the treble and presence low, G12-H30 and V30 speakers and the Seths in the LP it's sounding awesome now. And here's an interesting thing - I find I get better sustain and controlled feedback from the Seth than I do the higher output C5. Must be something to do with resonant frequencies and possibly the lack of potting.

                              My band went along to a jam night on Monday and got up to play a few songs. I had to plug my LP into a solid state Crate combo - I was dreading it. We played a mix of stuff including Moondance (mellow ) through to Waiting For An Alibi (rockin' ) and I got the full range of necessary tones on an amp I wasn't familiar with. Brought the house down!

                              The Seths are great pickups, full of character, bright but warm, and very versatile - just ask Steve_R!

                              Perhaps I should dump the Jubilee and get a little solid state Crate combo.

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X