Ever have a pickup really turn a guitar around?

ImmortalSix

John Mayer's Mankini
I have.

Story:

I have this '96 American Standard Strat that my dad gave me as a gift, new in 1996. Some of you know it. 3-color sunburst + maple board, white on white plastic. Stock as your mom's Honda.

Well, I've never liked the pickups on it. I've been through 4 amps, thinking it was their fault, until I landed on my current best-thing-since-sliced-bread amp, the Valvetronix.

After I got my VOX amp, the neck+middle position started sounding like I wanted it to, which is my favorite position for solo / articulate / fingerpicking / anything that's not chords.

Regrettably, I could not find any pickup position, tweaking of the knobs, or tweaking of the amp that would give me a good rhythm sound, just playing chords.

I had been playing ALL of my other guitars because of this, including a Squier '51, a Jackson JS20, and I even went to the store and bought another guitar, an Epiphone Dot Studio, to try and get a good rhythm sound. The Dot got close, real close, but it doesn't play anywhere near the caliber of my MIA Strat. I wanted the playability of the Strat with the sound of the 335.

So I got an award at work, which included a $75 gift card, and I decided to use it to get a Lil' '59 for my Strat.

I fell in love with the old girl again.

I have been playing it non-stop.

I played the Strat at my church gig on Sunday, and it sounded great --- I got that responsiveness to volume and tone knob changes that the stock singlecoils just don't have. It's more well rounded than my bassy 335, and less trebly than my sharp '51, and definitely less gainy than my Jackson.

It's juuuuuuuuuuuuust right!


Cliffs: I hated the pickups in my Strat for 12 years until I put a Lil '59 in it, and now I'm good to go!

Ever have a pickup swap turn a guitar around for you?
 
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Re: Ever have a pickup really turn a guitar around?

That's definitely me.

I've always loved the way my Ibanez plays, but the stock pickups were so incredibly thin, buzzy and "blah" that I started to have second thoughts on this guitar. I wanted to sell it. And I started to blame everything else on the guitar: The floating tremolo, the basswood body, the thin-as-a-toothpick neck. Started to use thicker strings too.

Until one day I bought a Duncan JB and went WOW! But I still had a lousy neck humbucker. So I moved the JB to the neck, and landed the best pickup this kind of guitar can have IMO: A Dimarzio Breed. Even better than the JB for my RG, but if this were a Strat I'm sure I'd prefer the JB.

So now I have an RG that sounds big. :D I don't even have to bother with thick strings anymore; 9-46 sound perfect. :)
 
Re: Ever have a pickup really turn a guitar around?

Sure man, and a very similar story to yours only mine was an MiM that I bought for entering University and it was after 6-7 years, when I FINALLY put the Crazy 8 at the bridge (it was SSS before that with the DMZ Fast Track 2 at the bridge).

Ever since then I've changed EVERYTHING in her and she's currently (for me) the "I don't need any other Strats" Strat :9:
 
Re: Ever have a pickup really turn a guitar around?

All of my guitars. Stock PU's are a crapshoot as to whether they match the wood for the tones you want. And stock electronics usually need some imagination.
 
Re: Ever have a pickup really turn a guitar around?

yep the VHPAF in my Ibanez RT450 is my favorite bucker! so veritile. Actually my 3 main guitar recently all got revamped.

RT450
Bluesbucker 5
Virtual Vintage Blues
VHPAF

Silvertone "shredder" (sss)
Stock Ceramic
Stock Ceramic
Area '61

Samick Torino TR-1
'59
X
Demon

gonna switch out the 59 for a phat cat with an A2/A5 mag configuration and an A8 in the demon then i will be set!... until i need pickups for my project lol
 
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