You can't run a passive neck together with an active bridge. You would have to have separate jacks for each.
Now if you are looking for a tonal match with passives from Duncan I would say maybe a DD bridge and neck. I find the 81 in particular to be really bright and on the harsh side. The closest Passive set i can think of to a EMG 81/60 set would be a set of Kiesel Lithium's. Have EMG's in only one guitar but it's a 85 bridge H 60 A neck with A5 mags in both. .
I'd go with a Jazz set. It would be a more dynamic, touch-sensitive version of the higher output pickups mentioned here.
Not looking to run passive and active together. Just going for the tonal match. I'm trading in an ESP Eclipse with EMGs (it actually has the 81x/60x) for a Gibson Flying V. I'm not too sure I want to go through the hassle of trying to cram the active's pots/hardware in the V's control cavity. The distortion neck is an interesting suggestion, one I'm not familiar with. I hear good things about the newer Kiesel pickups, but they don't seem to be available without a guitar attached...
How does the Jazz hold up in the bridge under heavy distortion?
Much like the bridge, I'd be willing to bet on the Distortion SH-6N.I was thinking Black Winter/Jazz. What is the Black Winter neck based on?
You can't run a passive neck together with an active bridge. You would have to have separate jacks for each.
They are very clear sounding. They don't get mushy like higher output pickups do.
Got it. Dimarzio DeActivators may also be a good choice.
on the Kiesel pickups they are available direct but are pretty pricy. If you check Reverb you can normally find a set relatively cheap in particular the Lithiums some love them some hate them and for many Kiesel models they are the defaults so--.
Here is a DeActivator vs 81 comparison. Got a guitar with them that I pulled as just not what I needed for what i do but thought they sounded good for the really heavy stuff.
If saturation is the goal, I had to use a boost on just about everything I tried to match what I heard on records. With EMGs or without.
Running straight to an amp, be it a 5150, Dual Rec, JCM2000, or something a little different like a Mesa Nomad or a Carvin Vai Legacy...I had to boost. The dirty channel only sounded too much like the mid gain channel on a three channel amp. If I added in additional gain from the amp, it became a fizzy mess--like I was trying to play rhythm on a lead boost channel.
It was only after the advent of the modern DAW and impulse responses around 2010 that I got exactly the tone I heard in my head. But even in that environment I prefer a boost of some kind.
But this also probably depends a lot on whether you like to get your tone early in the chain or later. I very much prefer later in the chain these days.
If the OP truly wants saturation, maybe the AB or PA2 will be worth a try. And they should work with either passive or active pickups.
The EXG midrange control is also very nice for notching out problematic mids. I find it works well to get a scooped Marshall crunch.