Introducing Thrash Factor!

Ugh. Try the original studio album Rust in Peace. Thats the sound we have been loving for three decades.
Sound, what sound? It's all hearsay...
https://www.martyfriedman.com/fans_f...nt.php?id=7556
https://www.ultimate-guitar.com/news/interviews/rock_chronicles_rock_chronicles_1990s_marty_friedman.html

I'm guessing you used the Jacksons for all these solos?
I have three main Jacksons: I've got Number One, Two, and Three, and I tried to use them equally. I wound up using Two and Three more than Number One and Number One is my main live guitar. So I think maybe live that guitar sounds the best but in the studio under the microscope, Two and Three sounded the best. I used Number One for maybe two or three solos.
 
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What does this have to do with anything? Marty is not a gearhead; he is an actual musician who can probably get his sound no matter what gear he is using. I am talking about Dave Mustaine.

That is my point, the RIP album guitars tone has little, if anything to do with the choice of pickups as it's discussed here. Mustaine, otoh, is both a ridiculously talented player and a very successful businessman who's been steering his ship for what, almost 40 years? Of course he needs to fund his business from various sources and this includes endorsement and what not. What's a Thrash Factor, some kind of JB variant? Not taking anything from him, of all the '80 and '90s metal he's my favourite composer and rhythm guitar player and the same applies to him: he'll always sound like himself no matter what gear he uses. Who can really tell the difference from listening to the tracks whether they had a bone stock JB, a JBJ or an early '80 JB when, quoting Marty, "this whole album that we just did was recorded completely dry; no effects on anything"? I can bet you can get exactly the same result regardless of the JB pickup flavour just by fiddling with the along the signal chain. Cork sniffing.
 
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