Re: Which GFS Pickup? (Poll)
Here's my issue with buying used pickups.
Not everyone on this forum is an engineering wiz. Personally, I get flustered when my pots start blitzing and my jack goes kaput, so I rely on my tech to keep my electronics working.
I'll assume that MOST people who buy GFS pickups don't have the funds or the knowhow to go swap happy on their wires and magnets.
Point is, I like to know that when I buy something, it hasn't been molested. Some teenage "luthier" decides his Invader didn't sound right in his Schecter and strips it yanking it out. At least with GFS, I know I'm getting a new product.
I'll admit, I can't tell a good lead wire from a bad one, when it ships from UPS.
I've bought
many used PU's online, your fears are exaggerated.
To most of us here on the forum, you've got it backwards. You're paying a tech to do something simple, that you can do yourself, and then having to scrimp on PU's. Wrong place to put the money. Don't put all your faith in techs; some don't know much more than you do.
No, guys who buy GFS are short on cash, but some do the swap outs themselves, just as with more expensive PU's. No hard correlation between PU cost and who does the work. Actually if anything, guys who buy GFS probably tend to do their own work, as they don't have the cash for techs.
Swapping PU's is low tech, no skill, no experience required. I know, because I have no prior handyman skills or experience. There's no 'wiz' about it. A kid can change out PU's on a guitar. You've got yourself worked up thinking this is way beyond your skill level. It's not. Don't sell yourself short. If you can operate a cell phone, you can swap a PU. Look at some online video instruction. Take the mystery out of it. Practice on a cheap Asian PU.
While you're at it, pick up Dan Erlewine's book 'How to make your electric guitar play great'. It's taught many of us how to do our own set ups (the simple parts of them anyways) and save us a lot of money.
For decades I used to be totally helpless when it came to guitars, didn't know anything, couldn't do anything. But Erlewine's book and this forum taught me that there's
a lot of things I can do, easy things, that don't take expensive tools or skills. Very few of us are luthiers. We all started out not knowing any more than you do. But we came here and learned.
One of the most important things a guitar player can do is understand his instrument, how it works, how it can work better. The guys here taken ordinary guitars and made them play and sound so much better. And these guys aren't geniuses, let me assure you. :14: It's basic stuff, that others have taught them. Pull back the veil, look at your guitars with new eyes. They're simple instruments and you can, and should, control every aspect of them. Take charge of your tone.