You just proved my point then.. thank you.
The Brobucker was designed to be the perfect hot PAF by all us forum guys.. hardly a niche market !
It was designed to fill a hole that the forum believed existed !
Surley after the sales it generated, it validated it's place in the standard product line ?
You just proved my point then.. thank you.
The Brobucker was designed to be the perfect hot PAF by all us forum guys.. hardly a niche market !
It was designed to fill a hole that the forum believed existed !
Surley after the sales it generated, it validated it's place in the standard product line ?
A few hundred people on a forum is not even a niche market. Lets get real.
The kicker though is this. A PAF, by definition, is wound with 42AWG wire. Once you get above that 10k mark, then you have to go to a thinner wire, such as 43AWG. No longer is it in the PAF category. It's possible to get the pickup to have a PAF like sound to it though, but that is as close as you're going to get.
So basically, it's hard to wind a PAF humbucker higher than 10K due to wire gauge problems. Thank you ErikH.
My current fave, the Custom 5, still has sort of a vintag-ey sound to it, so I guess I shouuld just contact the Custom Shop about a Demon/C5 hybrid and see what they say.
thanks for all those who lended info.
Thanks to Dr. Ad as well for the stick up.........got your back too man.
FWIW - Frank also told me that the closest thing to the '78 in the "stock" line is the Pearly Gates. I often see comparisons between the '78 & the Custom Custom which has a much higher DC... so again, what does that say?
If you can't get it out of the regular line, there's always a floor shop custom... or the actual custom shop... and there's a lot of other pickup companies too.
The real issue is simply tone. Amps today generate all of the gain you could ever want. Pickup output is really a meaningless statistic. I use a CC/A2P in one guitar to tame brightness. I use a pair of Seths in another for their smooth top end. I use a Bro/PG set in another for more bite. They all get plugged into the same effects/amps/speakers.
Yes!
I've never quite understood why the term "hotter" is used to describe pickups, and why people state, "I need a hotter pickup". It's all about tone: the mix of highs vs. lows vs. mids, and other nuances of tone. I think what people mean when they say "hotter" is really "I need more mids". It seems that DC resistance has become the measure for many unrelated things, simply because it's easy to compare with other pickups, unlike tone.