I bought a few Epi Les Pauls for demonstrators for my humbucking pickups awhile back. They all seemed to sound basically the same with their stock pickups, so I chose the nicest one to prototype new designs. Big mistake...
For months I was trying to figure out why my HB's all sounded hollow and had no power, and I tried parts from various vendors with no success. Then my wife asked me what would happen if I put some of the 'failed protos' in the other guitars. I did. Turns out that I wasn't all that far off with some of my designs, but there was some weirdness in that one certain guitar's wood or construction somewhere that made it sound strange with the pickups I was using. It may be unrelated, but that guitar had the hottest stock pickups of any guitar in the group.
Moral... If your pickups sound weird in one guitar, try another before you give up on your design.
rant over
Ken
For months I was trying to figure out why my HB's all sounded hollow and had no power, and I tried parts from various vendors with no success. Then my wife asked me what would happen if I put some of the 'failed protos' in the other guitars. I did. Turns out that I wasn't all that far off with some of my designs, but there was some weirdness in that one certain guitar's wood or construction somewhere that made it sound strange with the pickups I was using. It may be unrelated, but that guitar had the hottest stock pickups of any guitar in the group.
Moral... If your pickups sound weird in one guitar, try another before you give up on your design.
rant over
Ken
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