When you passively mix two very different pickup (for example an "high power/overwound" bridge PU with a "low wind" neck PU), the low powered one tend to dominate the mix, reversing the volume differences you have when the single PUs are selected. I attribute instinctively this to the fact that the lower impedance loads the high powered pickup more than the opposite. For example, I have this problem with Ibanez RG equipped with DMarzios Fred (bridge) and Humbucker From Hell (neck).
I don't like this effect, as I prefer PUs combinations where the tone is very different from both the "single" selections (no single PU dominates the mix). This is - obviously - best achieved with very similar/PUs, but in this case I'm searching for a compromise between "specialized PUs" and "good/useful combination".
In your experience, wich are the biggest factors to match to keep a good "mix": well chosen impedance, or resistance, or turns count, or some other?
Thanks!
m.p.
I don't like this effect, as I prefer PUs combinations where the tone is very different from both the "single" selections (no single PU dominates the mix). This is - obviously - best achieved with very similar/PUs, but in this case I'm searching for a compromise between "specialized PUs" and "good/useful combination".
In your experience, wich are the biggest factors to match to keep a good "mix": well chosen impedance, or resistance, or turns count, or some other?
Thanks!
m.p.
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