U
ubermetaldood
Banned
New member
I wasn't sure what to expect from these, and I'm not big on single-coil pickups either. What I knew mostly before this was that Fender single-coils were just OK, Texas Specials were pretty awesome, but my favorites have been Lollar Specials, Bareknuckle Irish Tour & Mother's Milk, and Lindy Fralin Blues Special. Enter the Kinman Woodstocks. I installed them in my Fender American Deluxe Mahogany HSS strat. Boy am I blown away.
It's so nice to have noiseless, strong output with a real single-coil sound. In fact, they don't sound *like* single coils. You can't tell them apart except for the noise in my opinion. I have a few single coils here and there like G&L's, Tex Spec, and Tex Mex and these sound like overwound single-coils. The neck position is one of the best neck pickup single-coil tones I have ever heard. The bridge pickup is awesome though I wish I would have opted for the higher output bridge. It's not that the standard Woodstock bridge isn't hot enough, but it's too balanced with the neck in terms of loudness. I'm used to HSS kind of setups so I like the bridge slightly hotter.
In any case, I have no complaints except that he sure doesn't leave you with much wire to work with. The packaging kind of threw me off. They came in this plastic box attached to a velvet-coated plastic insert. By appearance they looked kind of outdated and gave the impression as if they were great for that time, but not at all. They have a real classic and timeless tone that pleases me completely. Indeed it is a shame that I didn't try Kinmans a long time ago.
It's so nice to have noiseless, strong output with a real single-coil sound. In fact, they don't sound *like* single coils. You can't tell them apart except for the noise in my opinion. I have a few single coils here and there like G&L's, Tex Spec, and Tex Mex and these sound like overwound single-coils. The neck position is one of the best neck pickup single-coil tones I have ever heard. The bridge pickup is awesome though I wish I would have opted for the higher output bridge. It's not that the standard Woodstock bridge isn't hot enough, but it's too balanced with the neck in terms of loudness. I'm used to HSS kind of setups so I like the bridge slightly hotter.
In any case, I have no complaints except that he sure doesn't leave you with much wire to work with. The packaging kind of threw me off. They came in this plastic box attached to a velvet-coated plastic insert. By appearance they looked kind of outdated and gave the impression as if they were great for that time, but not at all. They have a real classic and timeless tone that pleases me completely. Indeed it is a shame that I didn't try Kinmans a long time ago.