Re: Serious P-Rails discussion
Well, interesting info.
First of all, My number one interest is the P-90's. I'd probably use that most of the time. I suspect there is some hum reduction just based on proximity of the rail coil. Bonus, not that I mind P-90 hum.
Second, Hot Humbuckers are AOK to me. If I was using Buckers I'd probably be wanting hot anyway for rocking hard (not that P-90's don't...P-90 through recto model = :headbang
I'm not a knob-on-the-fly-guy, so I'm ok with concentric knobs. I'd rather have the ability.
What are the rails like in Single mode? Where do they fall in the scheme of Strattiness?
I found that they are more tele-ish than strat-ish in the rail mode, obviously being a rail they are going to sound slightly different than a traditional single coil
and again I'm not saying they are bad pickups but there are better options available if you really want my opinion and love the P90 sound I would look at a pair of Lollar's Single Coil for Humbuckers I have a pair in my PRS Santana that formerly had two sets of P-Rails (that I had mag swapped in).
The difference in quality between the P90 tone of the P-Rail vs the Lollar SCFH is night and day. The Lollar's have a much more authentic P90 vibe they have a much more three dimensional, bloom, dynamic quality to them.
I mean to compare the two the Duncan P-Rail P90 mode would be like a 7.5 out of 10 and the Lollar would be a 10 out of 10. It's a very noticeable difference.
And while the rail tones where neat the only one I ever found to be useful playing with is using the rails together (neck and bridge). It gave a very cool tele-ish sound that worked great for country, rockabilly, and certain scenarios where that was the sound I wanted.
The Humbucker tones to me just were never anything useful in series mode it can be dark and over-powering for just about everything I play (I don't do metal or really hard rock) I play jazz, fusion, blues, surf, country, classic rock, indie, well just about every other style. And I have tried the Fralin Pure PAF and the stock PRS humbuckers in that guitar as a reference.
No offense to GuitarDoc because I do respect his opinion but claiming that these are really as versatile as they are marketed just isn't true. You've had them in that guitar since they've been released well what else have you tried in that particular guitar because the Fralin Pure PAF and Lollar SCFH transformed my guitar into something way more useful than all the options on the P-Rails ever where. And claiming to be a real P90 fan just doesn't even make sense I have multiple guitars with P90's but then again I've got guitars with just about every popular style of pickup and the ones I don't I'm planning to build in 2013.
So that's why I say they are a jack of all trades and master of none. To me none of the tones are the best of the best. There are good tones in the P-Rail but none of them are my end all sound.
Bottom line:
There are better P90's than the P-Rails
There are better single coils than the P-Rails
There are better humbuckers than P-Rails
The P-Rails can do all those sounds, but as I stated from actual use/experience comparing them with other pickups and other guitars I have found pickups that I prefer that make the P-Rails sound much more well mediocre.
So not to be hostile, argumentative, etc to Guitar Doc but compared to what pickups in that same guitar are the P-Rails so amazing? I'd like to know what basis of comparison you are using to put things into context.
Because if you like single coil tones I prefer just about every Antiquity, Fralin, and Lollar single coil (for tele or strat) I've used.
For P90's I think Lollar makes the best current production P90's and Fralin/Antiquity make some good ones too.
For humbuckers I think that there are a lot of pickups from DiMarzio, Duncan/Antiquity, Lollar, and Fralin that blow the P-Rail humbucker out of the water in both modern and vintage contexts.
To be honest if the Dot Studio were my guitar I would probably look at a good set of 50's styled humbuckers where you have the warm/fat qualitys with great clarity and articulation (such as Seth Lovers or if you like a little hotter Pearly Gates) or I would throw in a set of the Lollar SCFH pickups.
You can mag swap and have crazy wiring but I just think that at some point you are going to desire more/better and you are going to be going back to something simple that's what I did along with many others I have known that did the P-Rail adventure.