Every band at flat sounded good EXCEPT the 800K band. I had to cut that almost the full 15db cut to get what I liked. With the EQ set flat and 800hz cut I liked it. So my conclusion is these pickups in this guitar produce a dominate amount of volume at 800k. My pedalboard is pretty full, no room for another pedal so I may start to consider other pickups. Something that hopefully is not too hot in that 800hz band that apparently is not the frequency range I like. SD shows EQ of the pickups but they are strictly B/M/T and not specific ranges.
It's definitively due to the acoustic spectrum of the guitar involved IMHO.
Passive pickups can't promote or boost frequencies
selectively. They reproduce what the strings of a guitar give them to translate, according to a "curve"
always looking like a wide triangle.
IOW, the only frequency really promoted by a passive magnetic transducer is its "resonant peak", defined by LRC specs (inductance of the pickup, Resistance of the pots, Capacitance of the whole harness).
"Scooped mids" are an aural artefact basically due to the magnetic strenght involved: stronger magnets make pickups more sensitive to "big" thick strings containing more magnetizable material. In the same time they make resonant peaks higher. It sounds like more bass and treble with relatively less mids but it's
relative and "global"...
There's thousands of topics about such questions on the Net but if an explication is needed, here is one of the simplest possible:
http://www.buildyourguitar.com/resources/lemme/
And here is a useful calculator if you want to toy virtually with values:
https://guitarnuts2.proboards.com/thread/3627/guitarfreak-guitar-frequency-response-calculator
Enough theory.
Some humbuckers with a more "assertive" resonance (a higher resonant peak) and a stronger magnetic alloy than A3 might solve or at least diminish your issue. I"d begin with AlNiCo5 which is the strongest in the "vintage correct" range (albeit all A5's are not created equal at all).
If you want to scoop selectively the 800hz range, order a Bill Lawrence Q filter. Put it in series with a 22nF cap. Put the whole from hot and ground. But be aware that it will make your guitar sound like a fake acoustic, unless a series resistor is used (resistor> inductor> capacitor from hot to ground. Bill Lawrence did recommend between 4.7k and 24k).
It's possible to build more "efficient" notch filters but they require high inductance chokes like those used in vintage Gibson VariTone and it's not easy to find.
FWIW. HTH.