With all the PAF replicas on the market these days, it seems like one of the best ways to get a whole crowd of "cork sniffers" back into buying 59s would be to do something "special" with them.
Why not have mass production replicas of old school MJ winds? Tell the stories of old. Talk about being the first aftermarket company to use the Leesona, talk about the stories of old with Seymour and MJ winding these for the stars. Talk about how each set came to be, make it mythical almost, because they kind of are but I think the majority of the crowd doesn't get that. Might even be a great opportunity to talk about how SD fabricates their own parts to vintage accuracy. Seems like not a lot of people know that and these days, that's big marketing if I'm seeing things correctly.
I've seen some posts that MJ's pickups are often offset in the coils by 3% or so while the production floor is even in their wind between coils. Maybe go find a few "magic" sets, analyze them: offsets and intricacies in tension etc and maybe even label them an "MJ" or "J" line etc.
Might be fun to do roughcast mags to give them a slightly vintage flavor in a production setting, like the 35th JB/Jazz.
Don't know too much about supply chain logistics but it seems like it would be simple to do?
Especially now that Duncan and everyone can do offset coils (expired Dimarzio patent, as I understand it), why not give us all a reason to buy another 3-4 sets of pickups?
I know I'd be into that. Anybody else curious about something like this? Those "J" models are going for big bucks on EBay.
Why not have mass production replicas of old school MJ winds? Tell the stories of old. Talk about being the first aftermarket company to use the Leesona, talk about the stories of old with Seymour and MJ winding these for the stars. Talk about how each set came to be, make it mythical almost, because they kind of are but I think the majority of the crowd doesn't get that. Might even be a great opportunity to talk about how SD fabricates their own parts to vintage accuracy. Seems like not a lot of people know that and these days, that's big marketing if I'm seeing things correctly.
I've seen some posts that MJ's pickups are often offset in the coils by 3% or so while the production floor is even in their wind between coils. Maybe go find a few "magic" sets, analyze them: offsets and intricacies in tension etc and maybe even label them an "MJ" or "J" line etc.
Might be fun to do roughcast mags to give them a slightly vintage flavor in a production setting, like the 35th JB/Jazz.
Don't know too much about supply chain logistics but it seems like it would be simple to do?
Especially now that Duncan and everyone can do offset coils (expired Dimarzio patent, as I understand it), why not give us all a reason to buy another 3-4 sets of pickups?
I know I'd be into that. Anybody else curious about something like this? Those "J" models are going for big bucks on EBay.