J
johnstone
Guest
Re: What Fishman Fluence won't do
From the infamous email from the Fishman engineer "With passive pickups, the resonance shifts upward around 40% in frequency when coil tapped." It appears that this was not left out. And is not that the key point, the coil tapped Fishman does not sound like a coil split conventional pickup. The engineer goes on to say that Fishman is making a Devin Townsend pick that will through the magic of modern electronics will emulate an actual coil split. If the pre-Devin pickups could actually recreate a conventional humbucking pickup coil split why the reference to a new pickup that actually can?
Finally, to clarify this now infamous email response from someone at Fishman. As I stated, Fluence humbuckers can be split to a single coil. When an engineer or customer service person replied with the technical description of what happens to the resonant peak when you split a humbucker, it leaves out the fact that a split PAF type humbucker, for example, will have a weaker coil and higher resonant peak than a vintage Strat type of pickup.
From the infamous email from the Fishman engineer "With passive pickups, the resonance shifts upward around 40% in frequency when coil tapped." It appears that this was not left out. And is not that the key point, the coil tapped Fishman does not sound like a coil split conventional pickup. The engineer goes on to say that Fishman is making a Devin Townsend pick that will through the magic of modern electronics will emulate an actual coil split. If the pre-Devin pickups could actually recreate a conventional humbucking pickup coil split why the reference to a new pickup that actually can?
