Gunny47
New member
Hello all, I LOVE my R7 with all my heart. It was my dream guitar since BEFORE I started playing guitar and I got mine a little over a year ago. I went to the guitar store with 2 grand in my pocket after saving up and working for a while. Played every Les Paul they had in the store, and the one I bought was the best one there (lightest, sweetest tone, insanely good action, perfect fretboard, darkest fretboard, and of course, it was the goldtop color I wanted for a long time). So after playing the R7 for over a year, I kept it pretty bone stock, except for a metal jack plate, removed the pickguard, lowered the stopbar all the way to allow for top wrapping and 11 guage strings and of course, the natural aging and oxidation of the harware, minor scratches etc.
Now, after a year, and after I got my tweed amp, I am starting to realize that the bridge pickup is too harsh for my tastes. Neck pickup is perfect, but I would like to swap out the bridge pickup. Its good when you adjust the knobs on the amp accordingly, but because I mainly play with the neck pickup, I have the knobs set to where it sounds best with the neck pickup. Then when I go over to switch to the bridge pickup, it sounds too trebly and gainy, not as smooth and warm as I would like it to be. Basically, I want a pickup that is very similar to my Burstbucker 2 in terms of PAF character and mid range content, but I want slightly lower output and less highs (to make it sound more like my neck pickup if that makes sense).
When I play clean, I usually only use the neck pickup or both on, but now Ive been experimenting with the bridge pickup for slide leads just for more tones. Even with distortion, the sound has a little harsh high end. I want a pickup that will give me a spongier softer tone. Okay, now for choices. Im definitely going with the Seymour Duncan Custom Shop. How does this whole process work? (I can probably find that on the search, so more importantly) does anybody have any suggestions for specs? Basically, I want a Burstbucker 2 (I know its a Gibson pickup, but its a great starting point) with less output, softer, warmer tone, less highs and an added fatness and thickness to the tone, without making it louder or grainier or adding more gain (maybe changing the size of the pole pieces to achieve this). I also would like a slightly aged nickel cover, not as much as antiquity. Please shed some light on this for me. Thank you very much.
Now, after a year, and after I got my tweed amp, I am starting to realize that the bridge pickup is too harsh for my tastes. Neck pickup is perfect, but I would like to swap out the bridge pickup. Its good when you adjust the knobs on the amp accordingly, but because I mainly play with the neck pickup, I have the knobs set to where it sounds best with the neck pickup. Then when I go over to switch to the bridge pickup, it sounds too trebly and gainy, not as smooth and warm as I would like it to be. Basically, I want a pickup that is very similar to my Burstbucker 2 in terms of PAF character and mid range content, but I want slightly lower output and less highs (to make it sound more like my neck pickup if that makes sense).
When I play clean, I usually only use the neck pickup or both on, but now Ive been experimenting with the bridge pickup for slide leads just for more tones. Even with distortion, the sound has a little harsh high end. I want a pickup that will give me a spongier softer tone. Okay, now for choices. Im definitely going with the Seymour Duncan Custom Shop. How does this whole process work? (I can probably find that on the search, so more importantly) does anybody have any suggestions for specs? Basically, I want a Burstbucker 2 (I know its a Gibson pickup, but its a great starting point) with less output, softer, warmer tone, less highs and an added fatness and thickness to the tone, without making it louder or grainier or adding more gain (maybe changing the size of the pole pieces to achieve this). I also would like a slightly aged nickel cover, not as much as antiquity. Please shed some light on this for me. Thank you very much.
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