Re: QUESTIONS RE PRS PICKUPS
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First Question. Why are second hand PRS pick ups so expensive when so many people seem to swap them out for S D s?
I am going to help someone upgrade an Agile PRS copy and he seems to want to spend slightly more than the cost of a new set of Pearly Gates on a second hand set of PRS Dragons. I would not have done this
To try and capture some of the tones of the PRS rotary switch we are planning to have 2 push pulls. One giving combined OOP/Series and the other coil cut on both pups.
They're expensive because the Dragons are no longer made and that set is highly revered by some
PRS players who want a very strong bridge pickup that sounds great with overdrive. Also because the neck pickup uses an alnico 4 magnet and that's kind of a rarity...even though alnico 4 was actually the magnet Gibson most often used in the 1959 PAF's.
That original Dragon set is also said to be Paul Reed Smith's favorite set of PRS pickups. Or was at one time.
My '95 Custom 22 came with Dragons. The 8K neck is an alnico 4. The 19K bridge is ceramic. According to guys on the PRS Forum.
I liked the neck pickup but the bridge pickup was to thick and dense sounding for the bluesy tones I prefer.
I removed them, removed the 5 way rotary switch, installed a 3 way toggle and installed a set of alnico 4 Tom Holmes humbuckers I bought for a Les Paul many years ago. They were too bright and lacking in midrange.
So I found some used Dragon II's and put those in. Much, much better. But the magnet in the bridge pickup was reversed to work with the PRS 5 way rotary switch so I had to remove the nickel cover and reverse it so it would work with a Gibson style 3 way toggle.
The neck was the same pickup as the Dragon only with a nickel cover and an alnico 5 magnet. The bridge was 12K, alnico 5 magnet and with a nickel cover.
I kept them in for a year or so but the tone was still too dense and not vintage enough.
I tried some nickel covered Pearly Gates in it and "BAM!"....there was the tone I'd been looking for.
I really like the PG's. I also really like the Custom Shop PG's which are wound a bit hotter. I now have those in my Custom 22.
So now I have four PRS guitars. Two Custom 22's with CS PG's, one SE Singlecut with regular Pearly Gates, and one SE Singlecut with Slash APH-2's.
Overall, I like the PG's and CS PG's best. I'm a blues player and prefer '59 style PAF's with alnico 2 magnets...like the PG's.
Unless you're using a 5 position PRS rotary switch, you will need to reverse the magnet in the bridge pickup if you go for a set of used Dragon or Dragon II's.
If you go with PG's and a Gibson style 3 way switch, you won't have to do any alterations to the magnet...but you will if you choose to use the PRS 5 position rotary switch.
Personally, if your friend is going to insist on coil splitting, I'd suggest also using the 5 position PRS switch. Much cleaner.
A used set of unaltered Dragons or Dragon II's will come with the bridge pickup already out of phase magnetically with the neck pickup. Which is what you want if you use a 5 position PRS rotary switch. But if you go with a 3 way you'll have to reverse the magnet in one of the pickups...usually the bridge pickup.
Personally, I find splitting humbuckers to get single coils tones a useless effort because to me they just don't sound very good split.
When I want a single coil sound I'll play my Strat and get the real deal...not some thin, weak and puny sounding compromise.