So anyway, I'm dabbling with low impedance pickups - I wanted to AB one against a trad mag pickup. (ie feed them into two separate Cubase channels then solo one immediately after the other while listening on high quality headphones)
After AB'ing em ....they're obviously very different - a bit weird actually - the high impedance humbucker sounds somewhat nasal when put up against a wide bandwidth low impedance pickup, yet the same traditional (decent) mag humbucker sounds just fine in isolation! (some aural illusions going on there methinks).
IMHO the traditional humbucker kicks the low impedance's pickup's ass through a very high gain amp sim (some shocking noise with the low impedance pickup into a high gain sim ...and all this with a balanced preamp, well chosen components....but the Low Z pickup sounds fantastic into a clean channel). I'm figuring that's why EMG have a medium/high Z pickup into an active preamp - a far better SN ratio for metalheads (cos when you start off with a signal that only about 50mV peak to peak you have to apply a whole lot of gain just to get it up to a useable level...no matter how well your balanced preamp performs, it takes the noise floor right on up with it too...and through a high gain amp sim, well it sounds like a festival of white noise - btw I don't want to use a step up transformer)
Anyway, after AB'ing I thought I'd have a dabble with 'stereo pickups' (one pickup into Cubase & panned hard left - the other panned hard right)
Whilst there's not much in the way of a what you could call a wide stereo affect - the different frequency response (& no doubt phase response) of the low Z vs High Z pickups, does lend a little bit of 'width'...but some real aural fun (I said aural - ok?) to be had putting one of the pickups on auto pan, with the other just set off to one side of the stereo mix ....both with slight (& different reverbs) it gave me a nice warm glowing feeling which promped me to make my wife a cup of tea (which has never been known)
Worth a try when you get a mo. (no, not making my wife a cup of tea....the stereo pickups)
After AB'ing em ....they're obviously very different - a bit weird actually - the high impedance humbucker sounds somewhat nasal when put up against a wide bandwidth low impedance pickup, yet the same traditional (decent) mag humbucker sounds just fine in isolation! (some aural illusions going on there methinks).
IMHO the traditional humbucker kicks the low impedance's pickup's ass through a very high gain amp sim (some shocking noise with the low impedance pickup into a high gain sim ...and all this with a balanced preamp, well chosen components....but the Low Z pickup sounds fantastic into a clean channel). I'm figuring that's why EMG have a medium/high Z pickup into an active preamp - a far better SN ratio for metalheads (cos when you start off with a signal that only about 50mV peak to peak you have to apply a whole lot of gain just to get it up to a useable level...no matter how well your balanced preamp performs, it takes the noise floor right on up with it too...and through a high gain amp sim, well it sounds like a festival of white noise - btw I don't want to use a step up transformer)
Anyway, after AB'ing I thought I'd have a dabble with 'stereo pickups' (one pickup into Cubase & panned hard left - the other panned hard right)
Whilst there's not much in the way of a what you could call a wide stereo affect - the different frequency response (& no doubt phase response) of the low Z vs High Z pickups, does lend a little bit of 'width'...but some real aural fun (I said aural - ok?) to be had putting one of the pickups on auto pan, with the other just set off to one side of the stereo mix ....both with slight (& different reverbs) it gave me a nice warm glowing feeling which promped me to make my wife a cup of tea (which has never been known)
Worth a try when you get a mo. (no, not making my wife a cup of tea....the stereo pickups)
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