What tone/sound difference will I notice between..

Duke of Metal

New member
hey guys,
I read somewhere that the epiphone pickup that I have in the bridge is 16k alnico... Not sure if thats correct info or not, but anyways..

What different would there be between a 16k alnico and a 14k Ceramic (Duncan Custom)???

Any info would help.


thanks,
Duke
 
My guess is that it will be substantial. I'm a little dubious about a stock Epiphone HB having a resistance of 16k ohms. An ohmeter would answer that.

My guess is that the sound would be very different. Even within each brand, there is a similar sound, so to an extent, duncans sound like dduncans, dimarzios sound like dimarzios, gibsons sound like gibsons, etc. Many people with Epiphones have replaced their pickups with aftermarket pickups. I played a stock Epi Les Paul and thought it sounded pretty good, some others I didn't think so highly of.
 
jmcorey said:
My guess is that it will be substantial. I'm a little dubious about a stock Epiphone HB having a resistance of 16k ohms. An ohmeter would answer that.

My guess is that the sound would be very different. Even within each brand, there is a similar sound, so to an extent, duncans sound like dduncans, dimarzios sound like dimarzios, gibsons sound like gibsons, etc. Many people with Epiphones have replaced their pickups with aftermarket pickups. I played a stock Epi Les Paul and thought it sounded pretty good, some others I didn't think so highly of.
Yeah.. I am not sure either about the Stock Epiphone Pickup being 16k. How do I check?? Can I use a Multi-meter??

Also, I think the stock pickups in there are good. I mean, I've been using them for about 4 years now and through I'd change the bridge to a Duncan Custom or Demon when I have the cash as they will most likely sound alot better then stock bridge pickup.


Duke
 
I'm not sure what pickups the Epis come with, but the 498T is a ~14k+ alnico V pickup so anything is possible.
 
You can check without disconnecting the pickups. Just plug a cord into the jack, turn the controls up and measure the resistance at the end of the cord. Granted, you will be measuring the parallelled resistance of the controls, but being in the 500k range, it will make little difference.
 
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