
skoora
Well-known member
This.Wolfetone Marshallhead?
This.Wolfetone Marshallhead?
I thought the AT-1 was their JB.AT-1 is a fatter 36th.
I don't like many Dimarzios but I like the 36th anniversaries. In one of my LP clones, I have 500K pots and Dimarzio 36 anni neck and bridge. Neck sounds fantastic in this guitar. Hard to beat. the bridge is nice and crunchy and tight but it can feel a bit light in "girth" ( every woman's complaint) and a bit thin on the high end. I'm looking for something that is tight and crunchy like it but bigger sounding and fuller in the highs for lead playing. What pickup am I describing that is easy to find and doesn't cost half the price of a Charvel?
The old slash 2's have flat mids.
That being said, if you want to see how a magnet swap might change your pickup, this is one of the best comparison vids I have found:
I have never swapped them, but that's what I pretty much gather as well.I've never tried swapping magnets. I am interested in it but don't want to screw something up.. as far as i know, essentially a bit of heating solder to get it apart and then slide a new magnet in?
I thought so as well, although the AT-1 in one of my Les Pauls behaves a bit like a more powerful PAF and not as screamy as a JB sometimes can be.I thought the AT-1 was their JB.
Damn! I am SO glad to hear that you are still really liking the Whole Lotta' - I have 2 of them and once I found the right guitars for them, I have never had the slightest itch to try anything else. They really are like a traditional PAF with just a 'touch' more output and punch. I think these really shine in slightly denser, heavier bodied guitars - I've got one in an unpainted / oil finished Musikraft Northern Hard Ash body that weighs a ton and it just checks every box. My other Whole Lotta is in a particularly dense Alder strat body that has always been finicky about pickups and it is an absolute keeper.Seymour Duncan Whole Lotta Humbucker with the rough Cast A-5. It's the only other PAFish pickup that is equal to my 78 model SD. PDC recommended these so I tried one on a whim and I really like it. If you don't like A-2 magnets in PAF's check the WLH out.
I've had Dimarzio 36 anniversaries in the past and the SD WLH is just better.....of course IMHO.
Yes.The Dimarzio Fortitude is essentially that. Even advertised as such.
I've swapped magnets on a bunch of pickups over the last two decades. Most only require a screwdriver to remove the little screws to get the back plate off. At that point the two coils should lift with minimal effort. You may need a smaller flat screw driver to pry the old magnet loose from the wax. I have seen a pickup (dimarzio EVO comes to mind) that was using epoxy or hot glue to hold the magnet down, which required a soldering iron, but that was the only one that I remember needing an iron for.I've never tried swapping magnets. I am interested in it but don't want to screw something up.. as far as i know, essentially a bit of heating solder to get it apart and then slide a new magnet in?
Most likely too dark as well, if the Alnico Pro II is anything to go by.Duncan Slash AlnicoII
Shootout between Sunset Strip, Air zone and AT1..So what I have uncovered in my box of wonders:
Dimarzio PAF classic bridge
Duncan Slash AlnicoII ( first generation)
Air Zone ( which used to be in this guitar actually, 10 years ago lol)
Tonenerd Sunset Strip
Pariah Patina (alnico 2)
Custom Custom ( this one sucks, too dark)
Paf Pro ( disqualified - hate the mids)
Dimarzio AT-1
Shootout between Sunset Strip, Air zone and AT1..
Then select. I'd say sunset strip...but maybe that's a little more juice than you want for that guitar.
Mine is in a Poplar bodied Kramer Pacer Imperial with a floyd. I think it's a great PAF with just enough output that it feels great but still has that PAF quality about it and I like the difference between the rough A-5 magnet versus the A-2 in my 78 model PAF, the A-2 in 78 has a bit softer attack, some compressions and squish that I truly love. The WLH has a little more backbone but it isn't twangy underpowere overly bright spankfest that the 59B can be especially with a Floyd Rose bridge.Damn! I am SO glad to hear that you are still really liking the Whole Lotta' - I have 2 of them and once I found the right guitars for them, I have never had the slightest itch to try anything else. They really are like a traditional PAF with just a 'touch' more output and punch. I think these really shine in slightly denser, heavier bodied guitars - I've got one in an unpainted / oil finished Musikraft Northern Hard Ash body that weighs a ton and it just checks every box. My other Whole Lotta is in a particularly dense Alder strat body that has always been finicky about pickups and it is an absolute keeper.