Passive equivalent to Blackouts

edgeaxe1

New member
I have a set of blackouts in my main guitar which is an Ibanez S 520EX . I love the way they sound except a little noisy and the tone of the neck pickup is great but the gain is lacking. I just recently bought a S470 to be my backup guitar and I want to swap out the pickups. My goal is to find some pickups that sound like the blackouts but passive and and hopefully have more gain in the neck position. Is this possible? Thought?
 
Re: Passive equivalent to Blackouts

Gain is the domain of amplification and pedals.
 
Re: Passive equivalent to Blackouts

Then why when I switch from my bridge pickup to my neck pickup without switching anything else does it sound weaker? - less drive
 
Re: Passive equivalent to Blackouts

Well there are plenty of different possibilities. Check how high the neck pickup is sitting, and try moving it closer to the strings. If a pickup is to far from the strings, the signal will be weak. If that doesn't work, it could be a bad soldering job, or maybe something else.
 
Re: Passive equivalent to Blackouts

As I remember that Bridge Blackout is scorching output wise. Uncontrollable to me. Neck is a little more tame. Only had a brief tryout before removing them for passives.
 
Re: Passive equivalent to Blackouts

Sounds like you need to raise the height of the neck pup. As for more gain like stated previously that depends on your amp or pedal. The only passive pup that I've heard that comes close to a Blackout is the DimeBucker.
 
Re: Passive equivalent to Blackouts

The volume difference could also be caused by the solderless cable under the pickup being loose (not pushed in far enough). I've had that happen to me a few times.
 
Re: Passive equivalent to Blackouts

My first thought is that the neck pickup is probably too low, and that`s what`s causing the difference in Output (gain, as some have stated, is a measure of amplification. The pickups are the signal source to be amplified, hence output).

I believe Scott is on the right track (and BTW am totally stoked to see someone from SD recommend the JB in the neck, something I`ve been championing since 1996).

HOWEVER: not to second guess him, but IME my beloved JB@Neck sounds absolutely nothing like an EMG 85 or Blackouts neck Model, it`S much darker and smoother, and teh low end can be absolutely overbearing if you`re not a bit careful. I feel that the Duncan Custom is the closest match here. But I agree on the Dimebucker as a bridge alternative, though you may find it too "squishy" on the low end.
 
Last edited:
Re: Passive equivalent to Blackouts

I believe Scott is on the right track (and BTW am totally stoked to see someone from SD recommend the JB in the neck, something I've been championing since 1996).

Zerb, are you guys talking about a JB bridge model in the neck, or a JB neck model in the neck?
 
Re: Passive equivalent to Blackouts

There is no "JB neck model", the corresponding neck pickup would be an SH-2n Jazz.

Hence, there is only one pickup we could possibly be talking about ;)
 
Re: Passive equivalent to Blackouts

Step 1 raise the pickup

Step 2 check ALL the wiring/pots etc....

Step 3 mak sure you did a thorough job on step 2

After that, lt us know.


My belief based on a discussion w/ Frank Falbo is that the Blackout is Jazz based to some degree. I can hear that. And I LOVE the mega-loud on the bridge. I really use the volume to great effect to change sound / tone there.
 
Re: Passive equivalent to Blackouts

The Pickup height is correct and 2 separate techs and myself have checked the wiring( because of the noise) and they are installed correctly,besides the drop in gain or presence which ever you choose to consider has been in nearly every guitar I have played. Even when you record them the wave patterns are significantly smaller.

Thanks zerberus, duanburen , and Scott- very good suggestions.
 
Re: Passive equivalent to Blackouts

I have two AHB-1 bridge pickups in my LTD M-50 and not only are they dead quiet, the neck has all the 'gain' of the bridge but the sound is warmer due to it's location. I did the same thing with two EMG 81's. I would give that a try. Check your connections though, you have something loose.
 
Re: Passive equivalent to Blackouts

Last thought.... perhaps a faulty toggle or jack connection. I had a similar problem when I installed Blackouts in my EVH Peavey.

After hours of fart assing around I found that one of the jack wires were pushing against the body and causing both an occasional drop in volume and some times no volume.

I fixed this by bending the solder points/ears to a different angle
 
Back
Top