This idea been bouncing about in my head these past few week as it's been taking form.
So one has normal passive pickups, which tend to have high(-ish?) output impedance, and are loaded down by the guitar's controls, the cable to the amplifier, and any effects pedals one is running. This results in a pickup that interacts with the aforementioned such that tone tends to get darker as the volume knob gets rolled down, the cable length increases, or one accumelates various effects pedals. For some people, this is a good thing, for others it is a bad thing.
Then you have active pickups, which contain an onboard differential preamplifier. This allows for a stronger output signal that one can more easily overdrive an amplifier with, better noise cancellation than with a standard passive humbucker, and a higher output impedance that is not loaded down by controls, cables, or effects, Tone is consistent no matter what happens with the controls, pedals or cable. Again, this is good or bad, depending on the players preference.
From what I've seen of pickups on this market, it seems to be an either/or proposition. But why can't we have aspects of both? Wouldn't it be cool to have your favorite passive pickup, but with a miniature differential preamp circuit such that you can have very low noise, and a low output impedance that doesn't get loaded down no matter how many pedals are on your pedal board? It seems to me that this doesn't have to be an either/or thing. Could you not simulate a cables's impedance on the input of the preamp, such that it sounds like you're always playing into your favorite 10' Mogami cable, no matter the cable you're actually using? Active pickups don't *all* have to be high output modern-voiced things. An active pickup with PAF-like tones because it's wound with PAF coils would be rather cool.
Is this a crazy line of thought that others have attempted before and failed? Or am I on to something potentially useful here?
So one has normal passive pickups, which tend to have high(-ish?) output impedance, and are loaded down by the guitar's controls, the cable to the amplifier, and any effects pedals one is running. This results in a pickup that interacts with the aforementioned such that tone tends to get darker as the volume knob gets rolled down, the cable length increases, or one accumelates various effects pedals. For some people, this is a good thing, for others it is a bad thing.
Then you have active pickups, which contain an onboard differential preamplifier. This allows for a stronger output signal that one can more easily overdrive an amplifier with, better noise cancellation than with a standard passive humbucker, and a higher output impedance that is not loaded down by controls, cables, or effects, Tone is consistent no matter what happens with the controls, pedals or cable. Again, this is good or bad, depending on the players preference.
From what I've seen of pickups on this market, it seems to be an either/or proposition. But why can't we have aspects of both? Wouldn't it be cool to have your favorite passive pickup, but with a miniature differential preamp circuit such that you can have very low noise, and a low output impedance that doesn't get loaded down no matter how many pedals are on your pedal board? It seems to me that this doesn't have to be an either/or thing. Could you not simulate a cables's impedance on the input of the preamp, such that it sounds like you're always playing into your favorite 10' Mogami cable, no matter the cable you're actually using? Active pickups don't *all* have to be high output modern-voiced things. An active pickup with PAF-like tones because it's wound with PAF coils would be rather cool.
Is this a crazy line of thought that others have attempted before and failed? Or am I on to something potentially useful here?
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