rspst14 said:I would disagree about it being a bad idea though, if you like high output pickups, you'd probably be happy with the results.
Ryan
Majestic said:C'mon bro, think about it.
A p'up that sacrifices tone for output, knowing ahead of time that the guitar is "thin" sounding.
Then, put it in a fat-a** Les Paul. It's going to sound horrible. Period.
Heck, a Wolf sounds horrible through almost every amp you can test it in, save a couple.
Like I said, though, if you dig it, write back to us. We've been surprised before.
hey maybe he likes the tone of the wolfgang pups?Hellion said:Why in the world would you want to put a Peavey pup in a Gibson when there are soooo many other pickup choices available?
Majestic said:C'mon bro, think about it.
A p'up that sacrifices tone for output, knowing ahead of time that the guitar is "thin" sounding.
Then, put it in a fat-a** Les Paul. It's going to sound horrible. Period.
Heck, a Wolf sounds horrible through almost every amp you can test it in, save a couple.
.
amen to this! i totally disagree with majestic who said they are just high output pups that sacrifice tone!XXX-FACTOR said:Oh, I don't know, I like the Wolf pups and I've run them through a few amps. They have a lot of power, but I don't think they sacrifice tone. If anything I think they have great tone. IMO, A Wolfgang can run with any guitar out there, for less money than most. It's a great value.
all i can say is that was not my experience with the wolfgangs at all.Mike M. said:I'll throw in my 2 pennies here. I have a few reason's why I took the stock pickups out of my Wolfgang. First, every frequency had this sharp, razor like quality to it. The high end would cut thru steel but at the same time it was thin sounding. No muscle behind the scream. I even tried it thru a few amps and got the same results. Second, there were way to many overtones going on. So many that I always sounded out of tune. You know when you're tuning a guitar by harmonics and you get that waver when it's not in tune? That's how my guitar sounded when I played on the higher register playing one note at a time! Someone here said it was an intonation problem but it was'nt because again, I'm talking playing one note, not two. Playing two notes at a time was hell. Because the pickups are bottomed out in the cavities you can't take them down, so one night I raised the bridge real high and guess what? That waver was gone. That's when I knew those pickups had to go. I'm not saying they're crap, they just did'nt get it for me.
rnr5150 said:Well I have to tell you, I own a 73' strat and a 73' les paul but my favorite is my 99' wolfgang and I am going to put wolfgang pickups in the les paul to match closer to the wolfgang outputs. The wolf is my favorite but I will never get rid of my strat or paul.