Derek answered the question, (and he seriously did not even need to) and I think this should end there.
They were created in collaboration with the man who invented them. So yes they should be the most authentic thing. Duncan website answered that clearly.If I may ask a quick question, is the Seth Lover considered to be as "vintage correct" as the Throbak stuff? I have Seths and just want to know if I'm missing out on anything. Googling didn't answer this question.
They were created in collaboration with the man who invented them. So yes they should be the most authentic thing. Duncan website answered that clearly.
http://www.seymourduncan.com/products/electric/humbucker/vintage-output/sh55_seth_lover/
it might have been better if he didn't because the answer he gave was not totally plausible.
In retrospect it might have been better if he didn't because the answer he gave was not totally plausible. Others pointed out that other companies would have faced the same (non) dilemma, and Derek said they had nothing new and exciting, but the Bonamassa and WLH models are fairly new and well regarded. It just doesn't hold water.
If I may ask a quick question, is the Seth Lover considered to be as "vintage correct" as the Throbak stuff? I have Seths and just want to know if I'm missing out on anything. Googling didn't answer this question.
![]()
I hate some of you more than The Dude hates The Eagles.
The reviewer was Matt Blackett. Former....SD employee (Senior Manager of Product Development). Friend of the company. Matt is the 'guy' who nearly 20 years ago painstakingly recorded the sound clips for all of the pickups on the (CD originally) and now website. Including the PAFS. Matt knows every PAF Duncan makes...probably owns many of them and certainly has access to them all.
No, that's not it. Matt has reviewed plenty of other SD product and lots of magazine contributors have worked for other companies within the industry. Matt was only at SD for maybe 11 months? But we all do have Matt to thank for things like pushing forward on Blackouts, and pushing to include tap tempo when the first tremolo prototypes did not. And he's a great guy.That statement actually explains a lot. Imagine if SD sent something in, and Matt honest-to-God, thought it was the best sounding pup. He'd immediately be accused of bias for his long association with SD. People would say it was rigged from the get-go. SD was 'tween a rock and a hard place. They almost couldn't participate.
I'm trying to figure how to process this too. Its "someone else's house" but it's also established to get customer feedback in real time, and has been used for exactly that at times in the past. I need a minute...lets have a little more respect for our host people. you don't have to like the explanation but there are more tactful ways of saying things.
No, they are not. The bobbins are the right material, and the long legs are there but the magnet is polished, and the tooling marks aren't there on the baseplates. The Seth is literally the pup as it never existed, in its perfect "spec sheet form". So that makes them correct per the build sheet from 1955 Gibson but not really like a specific PAF that Seymour copied like the PG or 59.
I'm trying to figure how to process this too. Its "someone else's house" but it's also established to get customer feedback in real time, and has been used for exactly that at times in the past. I need a minute...
No, that's not it. Matt has reviewed plenty of other SD product and lots of magazine contributors have worked for other companies within the industry. Matt was only at SD for maybe 11 months? But we all do have Matt to thank for things like pushing forward on Blackouts, and pushing to include tap tempo when the first tremolo prototypes did not. And he's a great guy.
lets have a little more respect for our host people. you don't have to like the explanation but there are more tactful ways of saying things.
Did this comparison get published yet?
Does it look like a reasonable evaluation?