Inflames626
New member
Hi everyone,
So I'm building my first proper passive HSS guitar. My experience thus far is I have an EMG 81/S/SA with EXG control wired in 18 volts in a Jackson Dinky that I built maybe 20+ years ago. I will probably swap the SA and S out for some SAVs at some point. The SA in particular sounds fine but more like a lower powered humbucker than a vintage Strat. The 81 with the EXG fully engaged sounds great distorted in DGCFAD tuning.
A few questions:
1) I think I will dislike RWRP because I find hum canceling in general gets rid of some of the highs and presence to my ears. I would rather use a noise gate set very conservatively to deal with hum. I mostly record so this will be a blessing and a curse--less electromagnetic interference from live sound equipment but possibly more from computers and recording equipment.
So, I think I will take a path similar to the Hendrix set and do it truly vintage--no RWRP. The noise and the lo fi quality of true singles add to the charm of the sound as long as the noise isn't excessive, IMO.
Assuming I buy individual single coil pickups of the same model that aren't in the same set, is there anything I should be mindful of? I plan to check the resistance to make sure the slightly hotter single coil gets the middle position assuming there is a small difference in output.
2) Is it a thing to put a bridge single coil in the middle if you have a hot humbucker so you are "stacking up" output wise toward the bridge?
I thought that vintage pickup sets generally came with a low output neck, slightly hotter middle, and a hotter still bridge pickup in a calibrated set. But based on the SSL-2's page, assuming you aren't buying RWRP, it looks like it would just be the same pickup in all positions.
It will be a trial and error challenge figuring out exactly what I like in terms of singles. I will probably require a few HSS guitars to capture all the variations, or maybe even to have different magnet types in the same guitar in different positions like I did with the SA/S. Sometimes highs are too piercing for a given application. Sometimes you need more cut. It gets complicated.
So I will probably be starting with the SSL-2s and going from there.
3) I wanted to confirm that with singles of the same model and the same set the neck and middle are the same pickup when RWRP isn't desired instead of being a calibrated neck and middle set.
Thanks.
So I'm building my first proper passive HSS guitar. My experience thus far is I have an EMG 81/S/SA with EXG control wired in 18 volts in a Jackson Dinky that I built maybe 20+ years ago. I will probably swap the SA and S out for some SAVs at some point. The SA in particular sounds fine but more like a lower powered humbucker than a vintage Strat. The 81 with the EXG fully engaged sounds great distorted in DGCFAD tuning.
A few questions:
1) I think I will dislike RWRP because I find hum canceling in general gets rid of some of the highs and presence to my ears. I would rather use a noise gate set very conservatively to deal with hum. I mostly record so this will be a blessing and a curse--less electromagnetic interference from live sound equipment but possibly more from computers and recording equipment.
So, I think I will take a path similar to the Hendrix set and do it truly vintage--no RWRP. The noise and the lo fi quality of true singles add to the charm of the sound as long as the noise isn't excessive, IMO.
Assuming I buy individual single coil pickups of the same model that aren't in the same set, is there anything I should be mindful of? I plan to check the resistance to make sure the slightly hotter single coil gets the middle position assuming there is a small difference in output.
2) Is it a thing to put a bridge single coil in the middle if you have a hot humbucker so you are "stacking up" output wise toward the bridge?
I thought that vintage pickup sets generally came with a low output neck, slightly hotter middle, and a hotter still bridge pickup in a calibrated set. But based on the SSL-2's page, assuming you aren't buying RWRP, it looks like it would just be the same pickup in all positions.
It will be a trial and error challenge figuring out exactly what I like in terms of singles. I will probably require a few HSS guitars to capture all the variations, or maybe even to have different magnet types in the same guitar in different positions like I did with the SA/S. Sometimes highs are too piercing for a given application. Sometimes you need more cut. It gets complicated.
So I will probably be starting with the SSL-2s and going from there.
3) I wanted to confirm that with singles of the same model and the same set the neck and middle are the same pickup when RWRP isn't desired instead of being a calibrated neck and middle set.
Thanks.