Falloffthebonetone
New member
Re: Specs on Pearly Gates and PG+
"Adding a few hundred more turns will increase the d.c. resistance which bumps up the output a bit. But it will also lower the resonant peak. To account for that, we switched the magnet to an Alnico 5, which has a slightly sharper attack on the note; the effect to your ear is increased brightness. The result: the signature Pearly Gates tone with slightly more output."
EET_FUK nailed it. Here's the actual quote.A5's are bright and bass-heavy, with scooped mids and a firm low-end. A2's have a lot of mids, a loose low-end, not much treble, and much more texture and earthy dynamics. When you change magnets from A2 to A5, or from A5 to A2, you get a very different sound. PG+'s didn't get enough extra windings to warm them that much. Whatever warmth that imparted, it was more than offset by the much brighter magnet (going from warmest alnico to brightest). A PG+ in a Strat doesn't have a lot in common tone-wise with a PG in an LP. Two very different things. As many members here have commented on over the years, they don't hear 'sizzle' with their PG's, and wonder about that term. I heard zero 'sizzle' with my PGN. Along with '57 Classics, they had less sizzle than any other neck HB's I've owned. But that's in an LP. They sound different in a Strat; then they get more high-end.
"Adding a few hundred more turns will increase the d.c. resistance which bumps up the output a bit. But it will also lower the resonant peak. To account for that, we switched the magnet to an Alnico 5, which has a slightly sharper attack on the note; the effect to your ear is increased brightness. The result: the signature Pearly Gates tone with slightly more output."