I´ve heard people say that the design also "lets the string do it´s job" by not influencing the vibration nearly as much, which they sometimes say also gives more sustain. What are your Impressions on this Evan? Fact or fiction?Evan Skopp said:The patented Parallel Axis design is Seymour's idea of how a humbucker should be designed. With Parallal Axis poles, you have a strong magnetic flux field on both sides of the E strings. With standard humbuckers, you have stronger flux on the inside of the E strings.
This makes them more efficient and translates to better tone.
My personal favorite is the PATB-1b Original Parallel Axis. But a lot of people really like the Blues Saraceno pickup.
Evan Skopp said:Some say that the magnetic pull directly under a string inhibits vibrations. They call that "string pull." The Parallel Axis design has the flux field eminating from either side of the string, which doesn't inhibit vibrations as much.
It's a very cool pickup. If you want to read the patent on www.uspto.gov, the patent number is: 5,148,733. If you read the "Background of the Invention," it really explains the benefits of the Parallel Axis design.
rspst14 said:Evan, I've been wondering about this for a while...to your knowledge, has Seymour ever wound two pickups to identical specs, but designed one with standard polepieces and one with parallel axis polepieces, just to compare the two? I love the PATB-3 model, and I'd like to get that tone in one of my hardtail guitars while keeping the stock look. I've thought about sending MJ a nickel covered, standard spaced, standard polepiece pickup to rewind to Blues specs, but I'm wondering if there would be a noticeable difference in tone due to the different polepiece design? If they sound similar enough, have you ever thought about making the Blues model available as a standard humbucker? Thanks.
Ryan
Fritz6 said:I was wondering the same thing. I have a dual adj pole C5 I'm thinking of getting rewound to Blues specs. I'd think the P Axis design would sound a bit warmer than a standard model wound the same.
Sorta like when you stand off to the side of a speaker, it doesn't sound as harsh. The P Axis poles "hear" the string from the sides, not directly underneath.
Would a Blues with 12 adjustable poles be a custom shop model?
Fritz6 said:Oops, meant to say 24 adjustable poles. Like those Carvin buckers. Figure that way you keep the benefits of the P Axis design in addition to being able to radius the poles.
guitarshredder said:So how is the Parallel Axis Duncan Distortion compared to the Trembucker DD???
JB_From_Hell said:Would they rewind a Carvin pup? If so, the $$ wouldn't be too hateful, as Carvins pups are cheap.