waltschwarzkopf
New member
Hi guys,
A couple of weeks ago I bought an Epi Les Paul to have at home as a backup. I decided to remove the covers of the humbuckers to change it aesthetically and also improve the sound; I had also done that on the bridge pickup of another Epi and it did seem to improve.
So I took her to the workshop, removed the covers, removed the huge block of wax on top of the coils and around the pickup and reinstalled them and adjusted the height and screws on the bobbins. I noticed that the pickups were 57CH(G) on the neck and HOTCH(G) on the bridge, I thought these guitars (LP Standard) came with 57 classics (Epi version, of course). And when I took her back home I notice that the pickups were unbalanced, way unbalanced.
I re-checked the string height, each of the pickup’s height and also the screws on the bobbins and the problem persisted. The only solution I found was lowering the bridge volume to 5 and leaving all other 3 knobs on 10, and only then they would be balanced. Otherwise, the neck is low and clean and the bridge is LOUD and distorted. I looked around on the web and found that these pickups are ~8kOhm (57CH) and ~14kOhm (HOTCH), which is a bigger difference than my other Epi, which had 57s and the DCR was quite close among them; I don’t have it anymore, so I cannot use it for comparison. I’ve read that these are the Epi version of the 490R/498T combo, and some claim that the Gibson’s are also very unbalanced.
Sadly, I did not play the guitar right before taking it to the shop, so I don’t know for sure if the difference was already there or no. I did the job slowly and very carefully, so I’m sure that I did not damage anything.
What do you think? Do any of you have any experience with these Waxbuckers? Is this difference normal?
Cheers,
Walter
P.S. If you live in Zürich and want to get together and jam, send me a PM.


A couple of weeks ago I bought an Epi Les Paul to have at home as a backup. I decided to remove the covers of the humbuckers to change it aesthetically and also improve the sound; I had also done that on the bridge pickup of another Epi and it did seem to improve.
So I took her to the workshop, removed the covers, removed the huge block of wax on top of the coils and around the pickup and reinstalled them and adjusted the height and screws on the bobbins. I noticed that the pickups were 57CH(G) on the neck and HOTCH(G) on the bridge, I thought these guitars (LP Standard) came with 57 classics (Epi version, of course). And when I took her back home I notice that the pickups were unbalanced, way unbalanced.
I re-checked the string height, each of the pickup’s height and also the screws on the bobbins and the problem persisted. The only solution I found was lowering the bridge volume to 5 and leaving all other 3 knobs on 10, and only then they would be balanced. Otherwise, the neck is low and clean and the bridge is LOUD and distorted. I looked around on the web and found that these pickups are ~8kOhm (57CH) and ~14kOhm (HOTCH), which is a bigger difference than my other Epi, which had 57s and the DCR was quite close among them; I don’t have it anymore, so I cannot use it for comparison. I’ve read that these are the Epi version of the 490R/498T combo, and some claim that the Gibson’s are also very unbalanced.
Sadly, I did not play the guitar right before taking it to the shop, so I don’t know for sure if the difference was already there or no. I did the job slowly and very carefully, so I’m sure that I did not damage anything.
What do you think? Do any of you have any experience with these Waxbuckers? Is this difference normal?
Cheers,
Walter
P.S. If you live in Zürich and want to get together and jam, send me a PM.

