Re: pickup height
I gave this response a couple of days ago on this same topic. And tell JBFH that he can tell me to piss off directly if he wants! You don't have to do his dirty work for him. And I mean that with all due respect for his opinion....
Previous statement on the topic:
Whooaaaaaaa! I WAY disagree with that...
For example, the Gibson specs are:
Neck - 3/32 bass/treble
Bridge - 1/16 bass/treble
And since there is a string radius, the poles need adjusted slightly different for each string to follow the contour. every pup/guitar has a "sweet" spot. Too close and you start to kill sustain - the field doesn't allow for full vibration. Too far and you loose tone and volume. There is certainly a range where you can adjust to taste, but you really don't have to adjust much (quarter turn...)
Listen to a strat with flat versus staggered pole peices. That's a great example of how much of a difference it can make. I used to be a fan of ultra low action and high as possible pups, but after getting a really good set up, my guitar played AND sounded better.
No doubt you should ALWAYS go with what sounds best to you....but If I have spent 10 hours of my life doing this, I trust Gibson has spent 1000's of hours! And it's hard to know what's good without some point of reference. Such as you are a "As close as possible person" who never backed off far enough to hit the sweet spot!
So I recommend:
1> Get the factory specs and set those up
2> Spend some serious listening time, and make small adjustments each time
3>Try just single pole adjustments, as well as all six at the same time, and pairs and bass treble too.
4> Record if possible and listeb back a few days later
It takes some time to make four quarter turns and record the same set of licks, but I think you'll be surprised...
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