DreX
New member
I've been reading articles and watching videos on the art of pickup winding, specifically to figure out how much potential for variation there is when a pickup is machine wound or hand wound, and how much room for variation exists between the two.
I saw something on Zhangbucker's site that struck me http://www.zhangbucker.com/humbuckers.html
To me this describes Texas Specials perfectly, too dark and too bright at the same time.
If it were graphed out, I imagine you'd see a lower peak resonance with a higher amplitude than a more typical vintage single coil. I read one source that said Fender's are not hand guided, and given their high production volume, that seems reasonable to assume. This video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8M2a1yUmvEQ shows an older lady hand guiding wire, but she moves her hand slow and I'm thinking those winds must be laid pretty close to one another. I'm not sure how many winding stations they have, or if this lady even wound the Texas Specials I have for reference. Despite this video, none of Fender's pickup products seem to boast "hand wound" or anything of the sort, and that is most definitely a selling point that you would not leave out.
The other CS Fender pickups I have on hand are "Fat 50's", and they too are much darker than my Lollars and Fralins of the same materials and similar winds. I'd describe their voicing as Ant II Surfers that had been shot with tranquilizer darts. I keep them around as a point of reference, but there's really nothing special about them. I like the Texas Specials because if you're gentle with them, the peaky highs are can be a strength instead of a weakness.
Could Fender's winding practices be the reason so many people hate Texas Specials, and the reason they have the peculiar high end?
I saw something on Zhangbucker's site that struck me http://www.zhangbucker.com/humbuckers.html
Another complaint about humbuckers, particularly vintage output models intended for the bridge position, is a midrange scoop that exaggerates the treble (the dreaded “icepick in the ear”). Such pickups usually lack the midrange warmth and guts to keep the treble from standing out so strong. In many cases they double down on this problem by emphasizing the most unpleasant combination of frequencies in the treble range.
This is often the result of a far too neat wind pattern, the kind that makes electrical engineers to salute and guitar players cry. It makes a pickup sound both harsh and 2-dimensional, like when your ears are plugged from a cold and you can’t tell if a sound is coming from right next to you or a block away. Often this problem is made even worse by the choice of materials – polepieces, slugs and keeper bars made of steel alloys that only sharpen that icepick. The result is a pickup that drives guitar players crazy as they constantly adjust their EQ in vain – because they are STUCK WITH A PICKUP THAT PARADOXICALLY SOUNDS BOTH TOO BRIGHT AND TOO DARK AT THE SAME TIME!
To me this describes Texas Specials perfectly, too dark and too bright at the same time.
If it were graphed out, I imagine you'd see a lower peak resonance with a higher amplitude than a more typical vintage single coil. I read one source that said Fender's are not hand guided, and given their high production volume, that seems reasonable to assume. This video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8M2a1yUmvEQ shows an older lady hand guiding wire, but she moves her hand slow and I'm thinking those winds must be laid pretty close to one another. I'm not sure how many winding stations they have, or if this lady even wound the Texas Specials I have for reference. Despite this video, none of Fender's pickup products seem to boast "hand wound" or anything of the sort, and that is most definitely a selling point that you would not leave out.
The other CS Fender pickups I have on hand are "Fat 50's", and they too are much darker than my Lollars and Fralins of the same materials and similar winds. I'd describe their voicing as Ant II Surfers that had been shot with tranquilizer darts. I keep them around as a point of reference, but there's really nothing special about them. I like the Texas Specials because if you're gentle with them, the peaky highs are can be a strength instead of a weakness.
Could Fender's winding practices be the reason so many people hate Texas Specials, and the reason they have the peculiar high end?
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