Seven with Duncan Distortions

wallup40

New member
:fingersx: Last year I've had two Duncan Distortions installed on my Washburn WG-587. I thought active EMG 707s might serve my metal endeavours best, even though putting an identical pick-up on the bridge and neck seemed a bit awkward. I waited and waited. Those b.. are hard to come by. After 3 months , I did what I wanted to do all the long: install Duncans. The most powerful 7-string passives the store could get was Duncan Distortions (one bridge, one neck).

I was surprised to find that Distortions were pretty freaking powerful and improved the guitar's great natural sound (of course, it isn't a 2000 $ guitar). But some nagging part of me always wonders if I've done the right thing, especially when some store salesman from somewhere told me actives were best for metal. :eek13:

I would like to learn the cold hard facts without putting anybody down. Advantages of the Duncan VS "actives" (It's pretty sad you don't make Livewires for 7-strings). And the Distortions are not coming off.

Wallup40:yell: :dance: :chairfall

What I like about DD's: powerful, well-defined sound at any level, unique sound, great crunch, no need for batteries.:13: :13:
 
Re: Seven with Duncan Distortions

The Distortion is a very good metal pickup , very gutsy , thick and punchy the only thing is if you play very fast it lack of clarity , but that's true for any hot pickup .
 
Re: Seven with Duncan Distortions

The 707s sound pretty different than the Distortions, if I were you I'd stick with the Distortions. The 707s have less highs and aren't as "raunchy."
 
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