"Inspirational" pickup for mahogany Ibanez RG?

blacksheep806

New member
After months of lurking here I decided to join in and ask for help from the more knowledgeable minds. I thought I would get a way by just lurking and reading other posts and I got pretty far but not to my destination yet. So...

I recently got Ibanez J Custom RG8571 (mahogany body with maple top, bolt on neck, fixed bridge) and it came with Dimarzio Tone Zone bridge and Air Norton in the neck and I already know before even playing that the stock Tone Zone would probably be way too hot for me and that turned out to be right, the Air Norton wasn't too bad but I'm probably going with Paf Pro on the neck. Also I wasn't too fond of the tone of Tone Zone itself, the treble was way too smooth and it lacked some bite, and it had this infamous "cheap overdrive pedal" effect going on that I heard some other people also had experienced, so overall it was way too off for me. I mainly use my guitar for songwriting so I'm looking for an "inspirational" pickup so to say :D Getting a tone that cuts through mix isn't something I have to worry about since it's 90% just for demo/composing work.

After a ton of research I had lot of options on the table but I always wanted to give the JB a shot since it seemed to share so much opinions so I was curious about it and gave it a shot. Well turned out I kinda had unexpected neutral opinion with it. It was way better than Tone Zone, it had some nice bite in the upper mids and I didn't find the bass to be too smooth as some people have experienced, to me it was tight enough, but I also play with standard tuning so that might tighten it a bit. But then again I didn't feel or hear anything special about it, to me it didn't have any of that screaming or singing quality to it that seemed to make it so great for leads (and that description is exactly what I'm looking for), to me it just was pretty neutral nothing special to it. But I guess people see the "singing" a bit differently, to me it is that bloom when you pick really hard and bend the note at the sweet spot where you can hear the mid peak shift a bit midway the bend and then turns into a nice singing feedback, that kind of thing I'm looking for, and what I have seemed to found out that the high output of the pickups doesn't really give that, the note just sustains "too well" and it just keeps ringing for ages and doesn't transform into anything.

So again after lot of research I decided to jump to completely another direction and try way lower output pickup Paf Pro since it seemed to have a little bit of this half cocked wah thing going on and that got me interested. So I wanted to try it in the bridge and my first thoughts was that I felt like I was definitely in the right direction this time, I loved the versatility and ability to finally actually control the tone and get all these small details of my playing to get through. Like these small "half harmonics" as I like to call them, when you kinda like f*ed up harmonic and the note just screams nicely, it doesn't ring as a full note but not as a full straight on harmonic, and these small things I find impossible to get with higher output pickups, it's either full ringing harmonic, full ringing normal note or completely muted note. I really liked the Paf Pro but after messing with it a while I started to find myself wanting just a tiny bit more output and compression, I loved the tone and the response to my playing but I find myself really having hard time with some legato runs and the pickup made you really work for it to get them thru, which has its positives of course but it was just too much that it got to a point where it got just a bit disturbing. I of course tried to mess with the amp settings a bit and even try bit of compression from unit but I just didn't get to where I wanted, the pickup just didn't seem to have enough power.

Now my question is where to go next? ...

I have kinda narrowed my choices to FRED, Mo Joe, Breed neck model, Norton (a bit worried it will have too much of tone zone's tone that I disliked, that artificial "hi-fi" treble), Duncan Custom SH-5 (little worried if it's too hot, close to JB?) and also the 59/Custom Hybrid seems really interesting. Currently I'm kinda steering towards FRED and Mo Joe but I'm a little bit worried if it they actually have any more output than the Paf Pro, is it almost the same or is there noticeable difference? Also if you have some other wild card suggestions I would be more than glad to hear!

Thank you so much and apologies for the way too long first post! :D
 
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Re: "Inspirational" pickup for mahogany Ibanez RG?

Welcome to the forum. I vote for the home team, in this case that would be the Custom/59 hybrid or a Custom5.
 
Re: "Inspirational" pickup for mahogany Ibanez RG?

dimarzio paf 36th anniversaries.

the bridge is 285mv. almost as hot as a paf pro. more vintage sounding too. to me, it is the perfect blend of vintage with a bit of modern.

the neck is 250mv. again, not far off most neck humbuckers air norton is 280 or something.

they are by far my favorite humbuckers, granted that I haven't delved into the huge boutique aftermarket much at all.



regarding the choices you've put forth above:
the Norton has some of the sizzle of the tone zone, but has less bass, more hi mids, and a serious helping of harmonics. it is a really cool modern sounding pickup. it is very much in the tone zone family.
I've heard the transition described as a better or perfected tone zone.

in fact, I think all of the dimarzios you are looking at will have that fizz to an extent, that you dont like.


check out the dimarzio forum at dimarzioforum.com for more info. there are alot of the same guys that are here over there.

look at the "everything you wanted to know about......." sub forum too.

happy hunting
 
Re: "Inspirational" pickup for mahogany Ibanez RG?

Welcome to the forum. I vote for the home team, in this case that would be the Custom/59 hybrid or a Custom5.

I vote for the Hybrid, too. It seems to be exactly what you are looking for. Not too hot, either- there are still plenty of dynamics.
 
Re: "Inspirational" pickup for mahogany Ibanez RG?

If you are looking for some real note bloom and touch sensitivity, it's going to take an unpotted pickup to give that to you 100%. The wax potting takes most of that away. The only downside is that if you play with too much gain, you'll have feedback problems.

With that said, the Seth Lover set is the best off the shelf, unpotted PAF pickup on the market today. It has the openness, chime, airy quality, touch sensitivity and note bloom that is simply divine. It will handle a fair amount of gain, don't get me wrong. Since you're not playing at stage volumes, it really shouldn't be an issue. While the set is great and the bridge is perfect and crunchy, but nice when clean.....the SL neck may be the best, most sublime pickup SD makes. Period.

Just a different angle based on some things you've said.
 
Re: "Inspirational" pickup for mahogany Ibanez RG?

Welcome to the forum!

I think 59/Custom is a good option. It has nice harmonic feedback going on with the bended notes that I've experienced with many different guitars. It also responds very well to picking dynamics and has versatile clean tone for bridge pu. I would also consider Pegasus and Jason Becker bridge.
 
Re: "Inspirational" pickup for mahogany Ibanez RG?

Thank you for the recommendations and welcomes!

Looks like the 59/C hybrid is getting lot of recommendations, I also have read only good of this pickup so I'm getting really tempted to give it a shot. Also some nice wild cards that I haven't even though of; Pegasus, Jason Becker and Seth Lover.

The dmz paf 36th anniversary is something I gave a though in the past and I really like the tone I've heard from it but since Paf Pro is still a hint too low output for me I think the 36th anniversary would be too vintage pup for me, even though the tone is nice. Also thanks for the "everything you wanted to know about" forum hint!

Now Seth Lover.. I must admit that I never really knew much about unpotted pickups but I have seen Seth Lover mentioned a lot when I was lurking the forums, it seems to be a best on it's own. A pup I really would want to try given your description, I guess this would be something that would get the note bloom to a whole another level. But then again the what worries me of it is also the same as 36th anniversary that it might not be hot enough for me. Nice wild card though too thanks! I will definitely look on it more.

Pegasus seems to be associated heavily to extreme metal and all the demos I found of it seemed to be low tuned heavy distorted metal so hard to tell how it would work in a bit more tamed setting, I use fairly high gain amp and I like to drive it but not to too extreme distortion, just to the point it sustains well and I get some chuck on the palm mutes.

But then the Jason Becker pickup.. oh wow this came out of nowhere to me! I researched quite a bit of this pickup and while the description seemed to be lot about fast shredding and tapping etc. the specs seems and the tone I've heard from demos seems to be right up my alley, also the output seems to hit that sweet spot just perfectly, just a tad hotter than lets say paf pro to give it a hint more push to the amp but still retaining the dynamics and clarity and ability to clean up with softer picking. Also this one demo I heard had this wonderful feedback thing going on with it and that got me really interested of this pup. Now I'm kinda hovering between 59/C and Jason Becker pup, anyone of you played both? How would they compare to each other? So far what I've understood is that the 59/C is a bit more twangy and maybe a bit more dynamic (?) and you have to "work it" a bit more leaning a bit to more vintage style sound and the Jason Becker pup seems to be more modern and having some natural drive to it that give it a bit more "ease" to the playing by giving it little compression.

Also I still have the dmz pups in the corner of my eye (some reason I really would want to try to FRED, I wish I could just pick up a guitar with it and just play it for like 5min so I could get a feel for it :D) but the duncans seems to have more natural tone that I prefer. Although I must admit that a bit character like the paf pro half cooked wah thing does feel and sound nice but only if its at that level and not too extreme like the tone zone level of "hi-fi".
 
Re: "Inspirational" pickup for mahogany Ibanez RG?

I ended up with an Air Zone with a Paf Pro neck in one of my RG's and a Fred and Paf Joe in the other. Both of those sets seem to balance well. The Fred also works well with the Paf Pro, but the pro is a lot fatter, so I prefer it with the Joe. I love the Fred, but did not like the Mo Joe at all. Others like it. If you want something similar to the 59/custom hybrid in the Dimarzio line, you might look at the AT-1. It wasn't my favorite, but neither was the 59/custom.
 
Re: "Inspirational" pickup for mahogany Ibanez RG?

I ended up with an Air Zone with a Paf Pro neck in one of my RG's and a Fred and Paf Joe in the other. Both of those sets seem to balance well. The Fred also works well with the Paf Pro, but the pro is a lot fatter, so I prefer it with the Joe. I love the Fred, but did not like the Mo Joe at all. Others like it. If you want something similar to the 59/custom hybrid in the Dimarzio line, you might look at the AT-1. It wasn't my favorite, but neither was the 59/custom.

the norton always looked like, on paper at least, the closest to the hybrid.
5k-ish and 7k-ish coils, A5 magnet, slug and screw pole pieces, etc.
 
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