I just "don't get" PRS pickups. I actually enjoy some Gibson pickups... namely their custom shop P90s and Classic 57s. I bought my 3 McCarty guitars because they sound great, look great and play great right out of the box. They're built incredibly well and for the serious musician, that's a big plus.
PRS guitars in general are sort of a nich guitar. IF that is the sound you want there is probably nothing better. In most cases people who are switching out the pickups and so on are trying to get a PRS to sound like a Les Paul and it won't.......... no matter what you do. They are constructed differently and have a different scale length, these two thing IMHO is what really makes them sound and play they way they do. With PRS its a love/hate thing. A lot of guys buy them and aren't happy with the tone, so they start modding it only to realize a Les Paul is probably better for what they need and they wind up selling the PRS for a Les Paul.
Then why are there tons of threads about switching out prs pickups?
You bought three mcCarty's that sound great out of the box yet you "don't get" PRS pickups? They seem to agree with you just fine if the McCarty's sound good to you out of the box.
I just realized that came out wrong. They "sound great" out of the box unplugged... bit of a difference there and something I should have mentioned more clearly :smack:
Don't get me wrong, the McCarty stock pups are decent, but they're too muddy and dark for my tastes and really cover up what PRS has to offer.
But the sound from the pickups did not reproduce the guitars natural resonance.
I played them back and forth and the MIJ Squier with the 59TB sounded much better than the PRS everytime.
I tried differant pickups in it, even asked Lindy Fralin to wind me a custom set, but I never could get that guitar to sound as nice plugged in as it felt unplugged!
Sold the PRS shortly after that.
Lew
Ok, I am just going to come right out and say this, at the risk of ticking off some PRS faithfuls, but before you flame me, please keep in mind that I am the proud owner of a Custom 22 10 top!!:laugh2:
But is it possible that the seemingly endless threads on the various forums complaining about PRS pickups, are people that are mistakenly blaming PRS pickups for being crap, when in reality they are not digging the inherant sound of PRS guitars? I am starting to wonder if my Custom 22 will ever sound the way I want, I am on my third pickup swap and the guitar always seems to get a great lead tone, but for Rythym the bass strings are always muddy and the treble strings overly "zingy." Like everyone else, I thought it was the universally hated Dragon II's but the same problems persist even after swapping p'ups, so now I am starting to think the problems lie in the inherent tonal properties of the guitar and has nothing to do with electronics.
But after authoritatively stating all that, I have a SH5 Custom and PG neck on the way, and I am prepared to give it one more shot!!:laughing:
But is it possible that the seemingly endless threads on the various forums complaining about PRS pickups, are people that are mistakenly blaming PRS pickups for being crap, when in reality they are not digging the inherant sound of PRS guitars?
PRS pups tend to be all midrange. To me, they sound very honky, which is why I swapped them. I think PRS has a very specific idea about what he thinks a pickup should sound like, and it simply is not to everyone's taste.
Be sure to remove the treble bleed cap. That thing f&@#s with the tone in a very bad way
The best PRS pickups to me are the Dragon I and #7s. The Dragon I will do it all.:headbang: