richard parker
Active member
Having had my Bare Knuckle Rebel Yells for a couple of months, several rehearsal and one gig and also having done a lot of reading on the BK forum I would like to offer some observations:
All BK pups (and possible all quality scatterwound pups) share some common traits which are expanded tonal range, clearer top end end, greater definition and string seperation and the ability to retain these characteristics under humungous amounts of gain. Tim Mills (head honcho) says that this is due to the scatter winding.
I've read a number of people dismiss the notion of scatter winding as snake oil but this is just not true.
Try a BK against your favourite machine wound pup and you will hear the difference IMMEDIATELY.
Some have speculated that the Rebel Yell is BKs answer to the JB. I don't agree but I have been able to make a direct comparison with the JB I've had in my old SG for years. The most obvious difference is clarity. With the same gain settings on my amp the RY will let you hear every note in a chord at a point where the JB has become muddy and undefined. Keep adding gain and the RY will continue to produce lovely big chords while the JB turns into an ugly undefined mess. I used to think that the messiness of the JB was a limitation of the gain structure of my amp but I now know that this is not the case.
That's not to say that everyone LIKES these characteristics. Some guys on the BK forum have said that they find the BKs TOO clean.
Another obvious difference is expanded top end. It took me quite a few height adjustments to tame these pups but I'm now rewarded with a lovely bite that I haven't heard in a bucker in years.
I'm very pleased with these pups and I don't think I'll be thinking about buying another machine wound bucker.
If you haven't tried a BK or any other scatterwound pup you really owe it to yourself to try one (or two). After all, we all want the best tones we can get.
All BK pups (and possible all quality scatterwound pups) share some common traits which are expanded tonal range, clearer top end end, greater definition and string seperation and the ability to retain these characteristics under humungous amounts of gain. Tim Mills (head honcho) says that this is due to the scatter winding.
I've read a number of people dismiss the notion of scatter winding as snake oil but this is just not true.
Try a BK against your favourite machine wound pup and you will hear the difference IMMEDIATELY.
Some have speculated that the Rebel Yell is BKs answer to the JB. I don't agree but I have been able to make a direct comparison with the JB I've had in my old SG for years. The most obvious difference is clarity. With the same gain settings on my amp the RY will let you hear every note in a chord at a point where the JB has become muddy and undefined. Keep adding gain and the RY will continue to produce lovely big chords while the JB turns into an ugly undefined mess. I used to think that the messiness of the JB was a limitation of the gain structure of my amp but I now know that this is not the case.
That's not to say that everyone LIKES these characteristics. Some guys on the BK forum have said that they find the BKs TOO clean.
Another obvious difference is expanded top end. It took me quite a few height adjustments to tame these pups but I'm now rewarded with a lovely bite that I haven't heard in a bucker in years.
I'm very pleased with these pups and I don't think I'll be thinking about buying another machine wound bucker.
If you haven't tried a BK or any other scatterwound pup you really owe it to yourself to try one (or two). After all, we all want the best tones we can get.
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