belensky
New member
INTRO
Recently, I went down a fairly deep pickup rabbit hole. It started when I bought a guitar that sounded great acoustically, but for a long time I couldn’t find a pickup that truly unlocked its full potential. Out of frustration, I ended up ordering quite a few pickups from Thomann, hoping to find the ones that worked best for me.
That experiment gradually grew into something much bigger than I expected. I ended up testing and recording a large number of pickups—mostly DiMarzio, but also EMG, Fishman, Suhr, and a few Duncans—taking notes along the way and making simple A/B recordings of each in the same setup.
Along the way, I picked up a couple of other guitars, which led to a few side experiments—finding the right pickup for each instrument and testing them with different tunings and string gauges.
One thing that surprised me is that pickups often feel much more different under your fingers than they sound on a recording. With the right pickup, everything just feels easier to play (and I’m not talking about gain levels). With the wrong pickup, you still sound like yourself, but it’s more difficult to get there. I noticed that my playing subtly changed almost unconsciously—tiny nuances in articulation—to compensate for the pickup and try to pull the tone I had in my head.
Since I had already accumulated a lot of notes, mini-reviews, and forum posts, I decided to organize them into a readable format and share them here in case it’s useful for anyone else curious about pickups.
I also made several YouTube comparison videos. They’re quite long, but I added timestamps below each video so you can easily jump between pickups. Think of it more as a pickup reference database than an educational or entertainment series. However The best way to compare pickups, though, is to listen to the raw, uncompressed files, so I’ve uploaded them to Google Drive—anyone can drop them into a DAW and hear them exactly as intended.
raw files download link
Below you can find my notes. Obviously, there’s a lot to read, so I’ve broken everything into sections for easier skimming. I hope I don’t come across as too opinionated or blunt—these are just my personal experiences, which don’t have to match yours. I’m not here to sell, preach, or promote anything. I also apologize in advance if I post a lot about DiMarzio, EMG, or Fishman here on a Seymour Duncan forum—I know some Duncan fans might raise an eyebrow, so I hope I don’t rub anyone the wrong way.
REVIEW
For the sake of discussion, I loosely grouped humbuckers into a few broad categories (distortion, modern, hot-rod, hot PAF, and PAF). The categories are obviously subjective, but they make the comparisons a bit easier to follow.
Distortion — high-output, old-school raw pickups designed to squeeze maximum gain out of amps that aren’t extremely high-gain, such as a Marshall Plexi or a Marshall JCM800. They typically use large ceramic magnets and have fairly high DC resistance, usually around 13–17kΩ. Typical examples include the DiMarzio Super Distortion, DiMarzio X2N, Gibson Dirty Fingers, Gibson 500T, Seymour Duncan Invader, and Duncan Distortion. They tend to push all frequencies at once and often sound quite thick and somewhat loose. Think of a hairy, aggressive classic rock tone where the main priority is simply driving the amp harder.
Modern — similar output levels, but instead of raw hair and thickness, the focus shifts toward tight low end and clarity. These are more focused pickups designed to handle low tunings, fast percussive riffs, and dense mixes. They also typically use ceramic magnets, but with slightly lower DC resistance, usually in the 10–15kΩ range. Examples include the DiMarzio Illuminator, DiMarzio Titan, DiMarzio Dreamcatcher, DiMarzio D-Sonic, EMG 81, and Fishman Fluence Modern, as well as the Duncan Jupiter Rails, Duncan Scourge, BKP Juggernaut, and BKP Aftermath.
Hot-Rod — essentially variations on the Seymour Duncan JB formula. The classic recipe is an Alnico 5 magnet with around 15–17 kΩ of DC resistance. The idea was to take traditional Gibson P.A.F.-style pickups and push them to much higher output. They are typically more dynamic and less pushy than distortion-style humbuckers, but have a looser feel than the modern pickups mentioned above. Typical representatives include the Seymour Duncan JB, DiMarzio Tone Zone, DiMarzio AT-1, Suhr SSH+, Fishman Fluence Classic, and Bare Knuckle Holy Diver.
Hot PAFs — various takes on the “PAF on steroids” concept. Frequency-wise and dynamically, they are closer to classic PAFs (cleaner, leaner, tighter, and more open than a typical hot-rod pickup), but with more output and more body in the sound than a standard PAF. They usually measure around 10–14 kΩ of DC resistance and typically use Alnico 5 or ceramic magnets. Examples include the DiMarzio Fred, DiMarzio Norton, Gibson 498T, Seymour Duncan Custom, Duncan PATB-1, DiMarzio Transition, and EMG 85, BKP Rebel Yell
P.A.F. — various interpretations of the late-’50s Gibson P.A.F. design. Clean, airy, and almost single-coil-like in character. In reality, this category could easily be split into multiple subcategories, because there have probably been more PAF-style variations made than all other pickup types combined. They typically measure around 7–9 kΩ of DC resistance and use different Alnico magnet options (A2, A3, A4, A5). Typical examples include the Seymour Duncan Seth Lover, Seymour Duncan ’59, Seymour Duncan Jazz, DiMarzio PAF 36 Anniversary, DiMarzio Air Classic, Gibson Burstbucker, and Gibson Custombucker, BKP Stormy Monday.
Now let’s take a closer look at each pickup.
DiMarzio Super Distortion
a true classic. It often feels like this pickup can work in almost any guitar, rescuing even the most lifeless, dead-sounding instrument with its sheer output and authority. That said, if the guitar already has strong character and nuance, the Super Distortion can sometimes overpower it, downplaying the natural qualities of a good piece of wood.
It excels when you want big, dirty gain — a proper wall of sound. Despite what the EQ chart on DiMarzio’s site suggests, I found this pickup fairly bright. It has a lot going on at once: plenty of lows, mids, and highs. To its credit, among similar pickups like the Gibson 500T, Seymour Duncan Invader, and Seymour Duncan Distortion, the Super Distortion probably has the most balanced frequency response. Still, it drives forward with saturated mids.
Into my Diezel Herbert, it felt a bit too powerful and somewhat messy, since the amp already provides ample gain and compression — the Super Distortion just adds more of both. There’s a modern trend toward using more transparent, dynamic pickups and letting the amp handle the gain. I’d say the Super Distortion works best in brighter, relatively simple-sounding guitars (think alder). In darker or more complex instruments, it can get a bit too busy, at least by modern standards.
DiMarzio X2N
for a long time, I didn’t take this pickup seriously and didn’t even bother testing it. It seemed like an over-the-top, one-trick “Deathbucker.” Boy, was I wrong. Yes, it’s very powerful, but it has a cool, crunchy midrange and an overall surprisingly balanced voice. It sits well in a mix and doesn’t feel overbearing.
It sounds like a heavy hammer, but without weird frequency spikes. A genuinely great pickup with a strong personality. I love that it has a clearly defined character. It actually makes me want to build a dedicated old-school metal guitar around it — maybe something like a Dean V. To me, the X2N and the Super Distortion are pickups that have absolutely stood the test of time and earned their classic status.
Recently, I went down a fairly deep pickup rabbit hole. It started when I bought a guitar that sounded great acoustically, but for a long time I couldn’t find a pickup that truly unlocked its full potential. Out of frustration, I ended up ordering quite a few pickups from Thomann, hoping to find the ones that worked best for me.
That experiment gradually grew into something much bigger than I expected. I ended up testing and recording a large number of pickups—mostly DiMarzio, but also EMG, Fishman, Suhr, and a few Duncans—taking notes along the way and making simple A/B recordings of each in the same setup.
Along the way, I picked up a couple of other guitars, which led to a few side experiments—finding the right pickup for each instrument and testing them with different tunings and string gauges.
One thing that surprised me is that pickups often feel much more different under your fingers than they sound on a recording. With the right pickup, everything just feels easier to play (and I’m not talking about gain levels). With the wrong pickup, you still sound like yourself, but it’s more difficult to get there. I noticed that my playing subtly changed almost unconsciously—tiny nuances in articulation—to compensate for the pickup and try to pull the tone I had in my head.
Since I had already accumulated a lot of notes, mini-reviews, and forum posts, I decided to organize them into a readable format and share them here in case it’s useful for anyone else curious about pickups.
I also made several YouTube comparison videos. They’re quite long, but I added timestamps below each video so you can easily jump between pickups. Think of it more as a pickup reference database than an educational or entertainment series. However The best way to compare pickups, though, is to listen to the raw, uncompressed files, so I’ve uploaded them to Google Drive—anyone can drop them into a DAW and hear them exactly as intended.
Recording chain: Everything was recorded using a 1988 Hamer Chaparral: Floyd Rose, alder body, bolt-on maple neck, rosewood fingerboard. It’s a relatively neutral-sounding guitar without any noticeable frequency bias. The cable was 6 meters. The amplifier was a Diezel Herbert (second channel, all knobs at 12 o’clock), running into a Diezel 4×12 cabinet. No boosts, processing, or effects were used. Pickup height was set precisely to 2 and 2.5 mm (1st and 6th strings pressed at the last fret). The guitar was tuned to Eb, with 10.5–48 strings. Everything was recorded into a UAD Apollo at 96 kHz.
Samples: I settled on eight very simple but varied riffs and clichés. Everything is organized into numbered folders with the tempo specified, so anyone can load them into their DAW and listen in any order and at maximum quality. All guitars were recorded as double tracks in two versions: guitars only, or a mix. For me it’s very important to hear how a pickup behaves in a full arrangement, so I recorded not only dry riffs but also a very simple backing of drums and bass (the folder titled “Mix”). The bass and drums have minimal processing: a bit of reverb and compression,. The guitars remain completely unprocessed — a very raw mix with no actual mixing work done.
Samples: I settled on eight very simple but varied riffs and clichés. Everything is organized into numbered folders with the tempo specified, so anyone can load them into their DAW and listen in any order and at maximum quality. All guitars were recorded as double tracks in two versions: guitars only, or a mix. For me it’s very important to hear how a pickup behaves in a full arrangement, so I recorded not only dry riffs but also a very simple backing of drums and bass (the folder titled “Mix”). The bass and drums have minimal processing: a bit of reverb and compression,. The guitars remain completely unprocessed — a very raw mix with no actual mixing work done.
Below you can find my notes. Obviously, there’s a lot to read, so I’ve broken everything into sections for easier skimming. I hope I don’t come across as too opinionated or blunt—these are just my personal experiences, which don’t have to match yours. I’m not here to sell, preach, or promote anything. I also apologize in advance if I post a lot about DiMarzio, EMG, or Fishman here on a Seymour Duncan forum—I know some Duncan fans might raise an eyebrow, so I hope I don’t rub anyone the wrong way.
REVIEW
For the sake of discussion, I loosely grouped humbuckers into a few broad categories (distortion, modern, hot-rod, hot PAF, and PAF). The categories are obviously subjective, but they make the comparisons a bit easier to follow.
Distortion — high-output, old-school raw pickups designed to squeeze maximum gain out of amps that aren’t extremely high-gain, such as a Marshall Plexi or a Marshall JCM800. They typically use large ceramic magnets and have fairly high DC resistance, usually around 13–17kΩ. Typical examples include the DiMarzio Super Distortion, DiMarzio X2N, Gibson Dirty Fingers, Gibson 500T, Seymour Duncan Invader, and Duncan Distortion. They tend to push all frequencies at once and often sound quite thick and somewhat loose. Think of a hairy, aggressive classic rock tone where the main priority is simply driving the amp harder.
Modern — similar output levels, but instead of raw hair and thickness, the focus shifts toward tight low end and clarity. These are more focused pickups designed to handle low tunings, fast percussive riffs, and dense mixes. They also typically use ceramic magnets, but with slightly lower DC resistance, usually in the 10–15kΩ range. Examples include the DiMarzio Illuminator, DiMarzio Titan, DiMarzio Dreamcatcher, DiMarzio D-Sonic, EMG 81, and Fishman Fluence Modern, as well as the Duncan Jupiter Rails, Duncan Scourge, BKP Juggernaut, and BKP Aftermath.
Hot-Rod — essentially variations on the Seymour Duncan JB formula. The classic recipe is an Alnico 5 magnet with around 15–17 kΩ of DC resistance. The idea was to take traditional Gibson P.A.F.-style pickups and push them to much higher output. They are typically more dynamic and less pushy than distortion-style humbuckers, but have a looser feel than the modern pickups mentioned above. Typical representatives include the Seymour Duncan JB, DiMarzio Tone Zone, DiMarzio AT-1, Suhr SSH+, Fishman Fluence Classic, and Bare Knuckle Holy Diver.
Hot PAFs — various takes on the “PAF on steroids” concept. Frequency-wise and dynamically, they are closer to classic PAFs (cleaner, leaner, tighter, and more open than a typical hot-rod pickup), but with more output and more body in the sound than a standard PAF. They usually measure around 10–14 kΩ of DC resistance and typically use Alnico 5 or ceramic magnets. Examples include the DiMarzio Fred, DiMarzio Norton, Gibson 498T, Seymour Duncan Custom, Duncan PATB-1, DiMarzio Transition, and EMG 85, BKP Rebel Yell
P.A.F. — various interpretations of the late-’50s Gibson P.A.F. design. Clean, airy, and almost single-coil-like in character. In reality, this category could easily be split into multiple subcategories, because there have probably been more PAF-style variations made than all other pickup types combined. They typically measure around 7–9 kΩ of DC resistance and use different Alnico magnet options (A2, A3, A4, A5). Typical examples include the Seymour Duncan Seth Lover, Seymour Duncan ’59, Seymour Duncan Jazz, DiMarzio PAF 36 Anniversary, DiMarzio Air Classic, Gibson Burstbucker, and Gibson Custombucker, BKP Stormy Monday.
Now let’s take a closer look at each pickup.
DiMarzio Super Distortion
a true classic. It often feels like this pickup can work in almost any guitar, rescuing even the most lifeless, dead-sounding instrument with its sheer output and authority. That said, if the guitar already has strong character and nuance, the Super Distortion can sometimes overpower it, downplaying the natural qualities of a good piece of wood.
It excels when you want big, dirty gain — a proper wall of sound. Despite what the EQ chart on DiMarzio’s site suggests, I found this pickup fairly bright. It has a lot going on at once: plenty of lows, mids, and highs. To its credit, among similar pickups like the Gibson 500T, Seymour Duncan Invader, and Seymour Duncan Distortion, the Super Distortion probably has the most balanced frequency response. Still, it drives forward with saturated mids.
Into my Diezel Herbert, it felt a bit too powerful and somewhat messy, since the amp already provides ample gain and compression — the Super Distortion just adds more of both. There’s a modern trend toward using more transparent, dynamic pickups and letting the amp handle the gain. I’d say the Super Distortion works best in brighter, relatively simple-sounding guitars (think alder). In darker or more complex instruments, it can get a bit too busy, at least by modern standards.
DiMarzio X2N
for a long time, I didn’t take this pickup seriously and didn’t even bother testing it. It seemed like an over-the-top, one-trick “Deathbucker.” Boy, was I wrong. Yes, it’s very powerful, but it has a cool, crunchy midrange and an overall surprisingly balanced voice. It sits well in a mix and doesn’t feel overbearing.
It sounds like a heavy hammer, but without weird frequency spikes. A genuinely great pickup with a strong personality. I love that it has a clearly defined character. It actually makes me want to build a dedicated old-school metal guitar around it — maybe something like a Dean V. To me, the X2N and the Super Distortion are pickups that have absolutely stood the test of time and earned their classic status.
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