Cdwillis
New member
Re: Is It A Bad Idea To Mix Low Output Neck PAF's And High Gain Bridge Pickup
Not sure about the newer EVH stuff, but on the Peaveys the neck humbucker had a thinner gauge of wire so that resistance read higher, but it wasn't really a higher output than the bridge. That's what I read on a Dimarzio blurb with Steve Blucher at least.
Not at all a bad idea. You'd be surprised the amount of sounds you'll get out of one guitar. Check out just about any Epiphone with the hotch/57 set which is an easy one to try through an amp at a guitar shop. Most Ibanez guitars tend to have it that way too. But bigger pickup brands the JB/59 set is quite common in guitars for instance. There are even guitars with two bridge pickups in it. One instance of this Seymour Duncan sells the distortion mayhem set. The biggest example of pro players I can think of is Michael Romeo of Symphony X who is a guitar shredder with a Dimarzio X2N and Tone zone combination.
One of the weirder ones is Eddie Van Halen uses a low output bridge pickup and hotter neck pickup. I thought my peavey was wired backwards but I got a screw driver out and it sure enough was like that.
Alright so what do you do if the bridge pickup is too loud
or just lower the bridge pickups height to balance things out
If the pickup is too hot use a small valued capacitor as a filter
At the end of the day it's what works for you. I wouldn't see myself with two of the same pickups any time soon.
Not sure about the newer EVH stuff, but on the Peaveys the neck humbucker had a thinner gauge of wire so that resistance read higher, but it wasn't really a higher output than the bridge. That's what I read on a Dimarzio blurb with Steve Blucher at least.