Aceman
I am your doctor of love!
How did I mis this?!?!?!?!?
I currently have 3 T-Tops. I hate T-tops* but if you like them, great. You do you. I maintain that
1. They are not bad. But they are also not great for anything.
2. They are definitely one of the reasons for the after market pickup business growth
3. They are pickups that want to be a Duncan Jazz, but are not.
My 1979 Les Paul came loaded with T-Tops. I futzed incessantly with the pickups and couldn't get the sound I wanted. I started listening to and playing guitars from guys I knew with aftermarkets and ran into a Distortion loaded Les Paul. I was playing Priest/Maiden/Scorpions/Accept, Quiet Riot/Krokus and such at the time. THAT was the pickup I wanted needed. Got that for the Bridge and it is there today. Sometime in the late 80's early 90's? I LEFT there T-top in it, and am not ever removing it. Why? I like the range from metal screamer to mild. I liked the Richrath tones it got, and it killed for Sweet Child, and generally Bluesy playing. It improved when I went to a 500k neck controls (from a 300k stock). Still there, keeping it. I can Slash all damn day.
That said, my 1973 Tobacco Standard has a PAF and a Super Distortion, and no surprise what that is. A T-Top was NEVER going to give me the Frehley sounds in a significant way.
I have a 79 The Paul that currently has a pair of T-tops. I have had it a year or two now. I play it. And they are "ok" in the most ok sense of the word. I get it. In the 70's Gibson/Norlin put pretty much one pickup in everything. And just like the more extreme 490/498, you could with an appropriate amp and a pedal, play most anything. I will change them eventually, just not at the top of my "must swap" list. But then again, that guitar is really kind of a novelty. I'm not really using it for anything specific, or in general. Kind of like "I'll have some low-fat Vanilla ice cream tonight."
But once DiMarzio and Duncan came out - there were wayyyy better pickups for anything you wanted to do, and even more so today.
This is very different from my 57/57+. I changed those, but I would have been just fine with them for my overall purposes in Irish. But like I said, a PG set with a 9k bridge just had a little more of what I really wanted. I don't hate Gibson pickups on principle. I really like BB1/2/3 combos, Dirty Fingers, and 500k's. and now 57/57+ sets., depending on my purpose.
As for Schenker, his tone was nothing I think anyone was chasing in the 70's (His playing, another story! Kinda like Rhoads). In the 80's he went to DiMarzio, and eventually Dean. I have a Schenker V with Dean Lights out pickups and really like them. Would never swap for T-Tops.
I think Mincer said it best: Vintage pickups from a legacy company - people are gonna be interested. I was there in the late 70's. Nobody was interested. Classic 59 PAFs, SuperD's JB's, and such. T-Tops haven;t been of interest since the mid 70's and they were not of interest then. By the 80's until maybe 2020...no one ever mentioned them. Wonder why? Because Meh relative to all other options.
Consider that.
I currently have 3 T-Tops. I hate T-tops* but if you like them, great. You do you. I maintain that
1. They are not bad. But they are also not great for anything.
2. They are definitely one of the reasons for the after market pickup business growth
3. They are pickups that want to be a Duncan Jazz, but are not.
My 1979 Les Paul came loaded with T-Tops. I futzed incessantly with the pickups and couldn't get the sound I wanted. I started listening to and playing guitars from guys I knew with aftermarkets and ran into a Distortion loaded Les Paul. I was playing Priest/Maiden/Scorpions/Accept, Quiet Riot/Krokus and such at the time. THAT was the pickup I wanted needed. Got that for the Bridge and it is there today. Sometime in the late 80's early 90's? I LEFT there T-top in it, and am not ever removing it. Why? I like the range from metal screamer to mild. I liked the Richrath tones it got, and it killed for Sweet Child, and generally Bluesy playing. It improved when I went to a 500k neck controls (from a 300k stock). Still there, keeping it. I can Slash all damn day.
That said, my 1973 Tobacco Standard has a PAF and a Super Distortion, and no surprise what that is. A T-Top was NEVER going to give me the Frehley sounds in a significant way.
I have a 79 The Paul that currently has a pair of T-tops. I have had it a year or two now. I play it. And they are "ok" in the most ok sense of the word. I get it. In the 70's Gibson/Norlin put pretty much one pickup in everything. And just like the more extreme 490/498, you could with an appropriate amp and a pedal, play most anything. I will change them eventually, just not at the top of my "must swap" list. But then again, that guitar is really kind of a novelty. I'm not really using it for anything specific, or in general. Kind of like "I'll have some low-fat Vanilla ice cream tonight."
But once DiMarzio and Duncan came out - there were wayyyy better pickups for anything you wanted to do, and even more so today.
This is very different from my 57/57+. I changed those, but I would have been just fine with them for my overall purposes in Irish. But like I said, a PG set with a 9k bridge just had a little more of what I really wanted. I don't hate Gibson pickups on principle. I really like BB1/2/3 combos, Dirty Fingers, and 500k's. and now 57/57+ sets., depending on my purpose.
As for Schenker, his tone was nothing I think anyone was chasing in the 70's (His playing, another story! Kinda like Rhoads). In the 80's he went to DiMarzio, and eventually Dean. I have a Schenker V with Dean Lights out pickups and really like them. Would never swap for T-Tops.
I think Mincer said it best: Vintage pickups from a legacy company - people are gonna be interested. I was there in the late 70's. Nobody was interested. Classic 59 PAFs, SuperD's JB's, and such. T-Tops haven;t been of interest since the mid 70's and they were not of interest then. By the 80's until maybe 2020...no one ever mentioned them. Wonder why? Because Meh relative to all other options.
Consider that.