bigheadood
New member
I just put the Norton in my Ibanez RG321mh, replacing the C5 in the bridge position.
In a word…warm. Obviously, the Norton has much greater mids than the C5. So does the customcustom. But with the dimarzio, there are some strange things happening that I did not think were possible. The dimarzio has just as much low end as the C5, and is nearly as tight. The dimarzio has just as much high end as the C5, and actually sounds sweeter, smoother. The customcustom has a huge midrange which pushes the front end of an amp into compression very easily, but lacks low end thump and high end attack. The mid-range power of the CC tends to make it sound boxy, not very dynamic. The neutral mids of the C5 make it sound very open and organic…responds very well to changes in pick attack, but can sometimes sound kind of thin for single note leads. The mids of the dimarzio are strange…Huge and fat like the CC, but open and dynamic, like the C5….Oxymoron. Too good to be true. This comes at a price. The dimarzio sounds quite horrible (compared to the duncans) at clean settings. It also doesn’t sound very good when split. There’s a certain hardness (for lack of a better word) to the midrange which makes it sound wooden, and dead.
Good—Gain. The Norton is absolutely the best, most articulate shred pickup I’ve ever come across. The combination of the warm mids and sharp (yet smooth) attack really make fast picking and hammer-ons/tapping ring out with authority; piano-like, almost. The tight low-end makes it a very good rock and metal riff machine. It is very articulate, and responds very well to changes in pick attack; soft picking remains warm and sweet sounding, harder picking brings out the pick attack, allowing it go get nasty.
Bad—Clean. Don’t even try to play this pickup clean. It sucks. Bad. Also, don’t bother wiring split controls into the circuit. They’re worthless. This pickup does not mix well with the A2Pn that is also in my guitar. This guitar has a 5-way switch; only three of the positions on the switch are usable: Neck (serial), Neck (parallel), and bridge (serial). The other two positions are instant crap.
Since I usually play with at least some gain, this pickup works pretty well for me. I often find myself playing Paul Gilbert licks, that I otherwise wouldn’t, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing. Overall, I’m glad I traded my CC for the Norton, but I wouldn’t trade my C5 for it.
Thanks, Micah. I hope the ToneZone works out for you. Thank you, donnievaz. I hope my CC works better for you than it did for me.
Nick
In a word…warm. Obviously, the Norton has much greater mids than the C5. So does the customcustom. But with the dimarzio, there are some strange things happening that I did not think were possible. The dimarzio has just as much low end as the C5, and is nearly as tight. The dimarzio has just as much high end as the C5, and actually sounds sweeter, smoother. The customcustom has a huge midrange which pushes the front end of an amp into compression very easily, but lacks low end thump and high end attack. The mid-range power of the CC tends to make it sound boxy, not very dynamic. The neutral mids of the C5 make it sound very open and organic…responds very well to changes in pick attack, but can sometimes sound kind of thin for single note leads. The mids of the dimarzio are strange…Huge and fat like the CC, but open and dynamic, like the C5….Oxymoron. Too good to be true. This comes at a price. The dimarzio sounds quite horrible (compared to the duncans) at clean settings. It also doesn’t sound very good when split. There’s a certain hardness (for lack of a better word) to the midrange which makes it sound wooden, and dead.
Good—Gain. The Norton is absolutely the best, most articulate shred pickup I’ve ever come across. The combination of the warm mids and sharp (yet smooth) attack really make fast picking and hammer-ons/tapping ring out with authority; piano-like, almost. The tight low-end makes it a very good rock and metal riff machine. It is very articulate, and responds very well to changes in pick attack; soft picking remains warm and sweet sounding, harder picking brings out the pick attack, allowing it go get nasty.
Bad—Clean. Don’t even try to play this pickup clean. It sucks. Bad. Also, don’t bother wiring split controls into the circuit. They’re worthless. This pickup does not mix well with the A2Pn that is also in my guitar. This guitar has a 5-way switch; only three of the positions on the switch are usable: Neck (serial), Neck (parallel), and bridge (serial). The other two positions are instant crap.
Since I usually play with at least some gain, this pickup works pretty well for me. I often find myself playing Paul Gilbert licks, that I otherwise wouldn’t, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing. Overall, I’m glad I traded my CC for the Norton, but I wouldn’t trade my C5 for it.
Thanks, Micah. I hope the ToneZone works out for you. Thank you, donnievaz. I hope my CC works better for you than it did for me.
Nick