The 78 would likely be uneven wound.
Sorry Kevin, but I think all three aforementioned models all use AWG#42 wire, Pain Enamel in the case of the the PG and '78, and Poly in the case of the APH-1.The Pearly Gates, 78 Model, and Alnico II Pro Humbuckers do all have symmetrical coils. The three models do use varying gauges of copper wire!
The Pearly Gates, 78 Model, and Alnico II Pro Humbuckers do all have symmetrical coils. The three models do use varying gauges of copper wire and have differing wind counts, however, which is what defines their differences in this case as they are all use fully-gaused Alnico II magnets. The Alnico II Pro has the most classic PAF voicing of the three models in my opinion, and has that classic scooped mid-range, bell-like high-end, and full low-end and lower mid-range.
this is getting back to the min-nom, nom-max thing. also noticed something i didnt expect about the pg i pulled out of a guitar but i wanna take another look before i say anything more
Hey Kevin! glad to see you jumping right into the deep end of the pool. Ok first thing, always say that they use different types of wire. The veterans around here know the ~7-9k humbuckers are 42AWG, but the type of insulation, the insulation thickness, min/nom vs nom/max, and of course the wind details have generally been considered trade secrets.
But what you can see is that the A2Pro has brighter copper colored wire, which means it's poly. The 78 and PG have the brown Plain Enamel wire, which a PAF uses. So when you say the A2Pro has the most classic PAF voicing, well, the forum nerds might point out that of the three mentioned, it's the only one not made using PAF wire.
Exactly. If one pickup uses min/nom and the other uses nom/max, we wouldn't say they're different gauges, just different tolerances or different types...and now I'm on the edge of my seat waiting to hear about what you may or may not have noticed!
Yep, Frank, agreed. He just doesn't know yet how DEEP this end really is... closer to abyssal deep, if you ask me.Hey Kevin! glad to see you jumping right into the deep end of the pool.
NO!!!! You told him!!!!the type of insulation, the insulation thickness, min/nom vs nom/max, and of course the wind details have generally been considered trade secrets.
Is somebody calling my name here...?the forum nerds
Count me in as well. From all the Duncan p'ups sold in my neck of woods, the PG's been one of the few I haven't yet had the opportunity to dissect, so I'm more than interested in hear what Jeremy has to say about'em.If one pickup uses min/nom and the other uses nom/max, we wouldn't say they're different gauges, just different tolerances or different types...and now I'm on the edge of my seat waiting to hear about what you may or may not have noticed!
I don't have a 78 to look at but being a custom shop pickup I would be surprised if it used a polished A2 magnet since most of the custom shop humbuckers I own do use roughcast.
And using a roughcast vs. a polished magnet does give a different sound to the very same pickup and a different feeling playing experience.
In other words, I feel different when I play the same pickup with a polished magnet compared to how I feel with a roughcast magnet in the same pickup.


You answered your own question: the copper shielding is a standard feature in Trembuckers.what i found that surprised me, the copper around the coil. ive seen this on other pups but never a paf style pup. are all pgb's like this? just cause its a trembucker?
im gonna take it off and see if i notice a difference