Adjusting my humbuckers height

Wayne27

Member
I'm lowering the height of my humbuckers( both neck and bridge) on my semi-hollow and I was wondering which side should be closer to the strings, the treble side of the humbucker or the bass?
 
Put a capo on the 12th fret and measure from the bottom of the string to the top of the polepieces with a small automotive ruler. Then set 3/32 on the bass and 1/16 on the treble. That will get you in the ballpark.
 
thats a good start. i find every guitar/pup setup sounds best with a little experimentation. i have never once preferred the bass side of the pup closer to the strings than the treble side.
 
Yeah, I say...experiment. Start out with what idsnowdog suggested, and see what 1/16" in either direction does to the sound. Lots of great sounds are produced with non-standard measurements, so use your ears.
 
If you find a place where you like the volume and tone but want a bit more clarity you can raise the polepieces while lowering the pickup slightly. You can radius the poles to match the fretboard.
 
I don't set pickups to a standard height. It makes sense as a "setup" step if you're a manufacturer striving for consistency in the factory, but predetermined heights are rarely a "best fit" for everyone.

As for which side to put closer to the strings, that depends on what you're after. Generally, the treble side ends up a bit closer after adjustment, but this is not a hard-and-fast rule by any means. The final settings depend on your particular pickup(s) and your tonal goals.

I agree, experimenting is key.
 
I also don't set my pickups to any kind of 'standard' height. Most of the time I'm happiest when the pickups are quite a bit lower than any suggestions I've read. Typically it takes me a couple months of little adjustments here and there to get the heights sounding and working perfect for a new guitar.

If you put the pickup closer to the treble strings then they'll be louder. If you put it closer to the bass strings then they'll be louder. Adjust to what your ears like to hear. Most of the time this is slightly more treble side tilt for neck pickups and flat or a little more bass side for bridge.
 
If the neck and bridge are the same output, then usually you want the neck lower than the bridge to balance things. If the bridge is very hot and the neck is very quiet you might want the opposite (although this would be unusual). It's entirely personal preference. Do you want to balance the volume between the two? Do you want the neck to be hotter than the bridge, do you want the bridge to be boosted volume for solos? It's up to your ears.
 
How about neck pickups? Should they always be lower the bridge pickup? If yes the How much lower? Or is it just personal preference?
It is up to you. Some people care more about volume balance- they put the bridge were it sounds the best, and lower the neck until they get a balance they like. Some people don't care about balance so much and just put the pickups where they think they sound the best. No rules here, and everyone wants something different out of a multi-pickup guitar.
 
and some experience too, for example you must know for a single coil when you start earing the magnetic pull vibration
If we start to talk about experience and "must-know" 's, there will be a lot to say... How many realize that multiple pickups ALWAYS affect the harmonic content captured by their counterparts, according to their respective height settings ? "Stratitis" is just the tip of the iceberg, here... ;-)
 
incidentally that's why I do not like RWRP middle pickup on a strat :) it could be psychoacoustics stuff but in my opinion the sound changes...
 
As far as neck pickups being lower, I do find neck pickups sound "best" (personal opinion, of course) low because the higher you have them, the boomier and more exaggerated "neck-y" they get.

That being said, for me, it's about finding a balance. If I'm using high-ish or mid-high output bridge pickups (like the JB or the Custom) and vintage output neck pickups (like the Jazz or the '59), I almost always end up having them at roughly the same distance from the strings for them to balance output-wise at first, and then lower the neck a couple nudges in the mounting screw for it not to sound like boom boom mud.

But yeah, for me, I adjust neck pickups for them to work better with the bridge. Never the other way around. But my reasoning for that is I'm 95% of the time in the bridge, so squeezing the most from that position is my priority.
 
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I tend to find that it's easier to get a good bridge sound than a good neck sound, and adjust the neck pickup first. Then balance the bridge to the neck. But I tend to use the neck pretty often compared to some - maybe 75% of the time on that pickup with a strat and 50% with a LP.
 
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