Inflames626
New member
Re: Are the Gibson 490R and 498T good pickups?
Inkstained, this isn't really your style I think, but it's me demonstrating the 498t in the bridge of a mahogany Hamer tune o match in Pod Farm 2.5. It's through a Tube Screamered JCM800. It has a bit of reverb and delay on it for an 80s lead sound. It's a single tracked guitar.
The pickup is NOT mellow. I just think a lot of people prefer to play with mid gain heads without boosts or want to turn their gain to 10 by default.
The latter part is the 57+ in the neck.
https://soundcloud.com/devolve1980/hamer-tone
With all due respect to the great company that runs this forum, and the folks who have played longer than I have and have more experience with vintage electronics and so on, I think there is a definite aftermarket pickup bias. It is diametrically opposed to the "awesome because it says Fender/Gibson" bias.
I am skeptical of the logic that says just because Fender and Gibson are big guitar companies they cannot find talented people to R&D pickups. Most people who buy a Fender or Gibson aren't going to tinker with the electronics to keep from altering the resale value. And, for the less informed, Gibson and Fender's reputations are going to depend on how good those pickups sound because laypeople don't know about things like pickup swaps. People are just going to think that's how Fenders/Gibsons sound. That's a lot of responsibility riding on the pickup design. And, ideally, it's being designed for that particular axe instead of, as in the case of aftermarket pups, potentially going into anything.
I am somewhere in between Gibson/Fender and aftermarket. For example, I think the 57+ in the neck is much better than the 59n I tried. And yet I've also found the Full Shred set to be one of the best Duncan sets I've ever had. And so on. It can be difficult to find analogous products across companies since the perception of sound is so subjective.
There really is no shortcut around trying them all individually. Yes, Gibsons are a bit expensive (mine were chrome covered and about $85 each), but compared to what I have tried so far, they were worth it.
Inkstained, this isn't really your style I think, but it's me demonstrating the 498t in the bridge of a mahogany Hamer tune o match in Pod Farm 2.5. It's through a Tube Screamered JCM800. It has a bit of reverb and delay on it for an 80s lead sound. It's a single tracked guitar.
The pickup is NOT mellow. I just think a lot of people prefer to play with mid gain heads without boosts or want to turn their gain to 10 by default.
The latter part is the 57+ in the neck.
https://soundcloud.com/devolve1980/hamer-tone
With all due respect to the great company that runs this forum, and the folks who have played longer than I have and have more experience with vintage electronics and so on, I think there is a definite aftermarket pickup bias. It is diametrically opposed to the "awesome because it says Fender/Gibson" bias.
I am skeptical of the logic that says just because Fender and Gibson are big guitar companies they cannot find talented people to R&D pickups. Most people who buy a Fender or Gibson aren't going to tinker with the electronics to keep from altering the resale value. And, for the less informed, Gibson and Fender's reputations are going to depend on how good those pickups sound because laypeople don't know about things like pickup swaps. People are just going to think that's how Fenders/Gibsons sound. That's a lot of responsibility riding on the pickup design. And, ideally, it's being designed for that particular axe instead of, as in the case of aftermarket pups, potentially going into anything.
I am somewhere in between Gibson/Fender and aftermarket. For example, I think the 57+ in the neck is much better than the 59n I tried. And yet I've also found the Full Shred set to be one of the best Duncan sets I've ever had. And so on. It can be difficult to find analogous products across companies since the perception of sound is so subjective.
There really is no shortcut around trying them all individually. Yes, Gibsons are a bit expensive (mine were chrome covered and about $85 each), but compared to what I have tried so far, they were worth it.
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