Re: Phat Cat vs Mean 90
PHAT CAT BRIDGE -- too shrill for me. 8.5k not enough, needs more turns of wire to soften that up, but no easy task with the VERY limited space on the bobbin ends with the bobbin being significantly shortened so I'm not knocking Seymour for that.
Cure: A switch to 42.5 or 43 gauge.
Downside: Even 42.5 may not be narrow enough to get enough turns in there and Seymour may be legitimately concerned that the higher 43 DCR spec may drive away potential customers looking for something hardcore vintage.
Solution: Let me get back to you on that...
PHAT CAT NECK -- Definitely muddy. The cure has 3 parts:
1) Either lose the cover or have covers made that have little to no effect on tone. It can be done, Throbak has humbucker covers made like this.
Downside: Would be VERY expensive due to having to make such covers because you have to do it without without the copper layer between the cover itself and the plating. This would drive the price up too far for Seymour to make it a regular item and thus would at best be a Custom Shop item if Seymour were to go for it.
Solution: Coverless is doable and can still be made to reasonably look like a P90.
2) Narrower magnets. This mud thing is hardly unique to the Phat Cat neck, it is a problem with P90 necks in general, especially in the context of being paired with the typical P90 bridge. It creates, as they would put it in the NBA, match-up nightmares -- EQ the bridge just right and the neck is muddier than mud. EQ the neck just right and the bridge is a hat pin in your ear.
For those who don't know, P90's have not one but TWO bar magnets in them, one on each side of the screws. Two laid side by side makes for a magnetic field twice as wide which makes it far easier for the pickup to see those longer wave-lengths, and there are plenty of them coming off that part of the string. Narrower magnets go a LONG way toward trimming that fat and in most cases fixes the balance problem immediately if not sooner.
Downside: None whatsoever.
3) Way too much wire for the neck at 8.0k. Cut it to low 7's, possibly mid-to-high 6's.
Downside: Mid-to-high 6's might a little too light for most but would be great for archtop jazzbos.
Solution: Two versions could be made, say, one at 7.2k/A2 and the other 6.5k/A3.