uOpt
Something Cool
Re: Gaps in the product line?
A Strat single coil with heavier magnets but vintage wind (AWG42 QP). Same for Jazz and Precision pickups, I think the current QP versions do more damage to the SD brand in the bass market than they provide revenue.
The Phat Cat needs a refresh. It doesn't meet expectations.
An official neck humbucker for guitars where most neck humbuckers come out too boomy.
The equivalent of a Hot Rail (Strat/Tele) for Jazz bass. That would be very important for PJ setups that need to beef up the bridge pickup (the QP doesn't do it, especially for metal).
Those SSB-4 or whatever the plastic thunderbird pickups are called don't cut it. A mass-produced vintage style (firebird style) pickup with metal cover and regular floor shop price would be good. For guitar that exists. The Thunderbird is common with a cheap Gibson model, the Epiphone model and numerous other basses use similar-ish soapbars.
Just wondering what you guys felt might be some under-represented segments in the Seymour Duncan product line. This is a good question to ask now and again.
There have been a lot of interesting things released in the couple of years on both ends of the spectrum - from the stuff aimed at extreme metal (Nazgul/Sentient, Black Winters) to stuff designed for vintage-inspired tastes (Whole Lotta Humbuckers), to something in between (59/Custom Hybrid)... But I wonder if there's anything missing.
Have you recently wanted to buy an SD but went with something else because, ultimately, we don't offer what you needed for a particular project?
A Strat single coil with heavier magnets but vintage wind (AWG42 QP). Same for Jazz and Precision pickups, I think the current QP versions do more damage to the SD brand in the bass market than they provide revenue.
The Phat Cat needs a refresh. It doesn't meet expectations.
An official neck humbucker for guitars where most neck humbuckers come out too boomy.
The equivalent of a Hot Rail (Strat/Tele) for Jazz bass. That would be very important for PJ setups that need to beef up the bridge pickup (the QP doesn't do it, especially for metal).
Those SSB-4 or whatever the plastic thunderbird pickups are called don't cut it. A mass-produced vintage style (firebird style) pickup with metal cover and regular floor shop price would be good. For guitar that exists. The Thunderbird is common with a cheap Gibson model, the Epiphone model and numerous other basses use similar-ish soapbars.