
BrentSSL
Active member
I have a custom custom in the bridge of a Celtic fender its so so sounding through my dual rec what is this a good pickup or should I try something else?
Avi8r2005":jj7obgu1 said:Duncan Distortion gets my vote. I have one in my Charvel So-Cal, love it. Girthy and meaty sounding. It gets pretty aggressive and stays tight. I'm thinking of ripping the EMG's out of my KH2 and putting a distortion and jazz combo in it.
I second this! I just put one in my strat and it has just the right amount of everythinganomaly":178an8vw said:Duncan Distortion is my favorite Seymour Duncan pickup. It's thick in the mids and tight in the lows with just the right amount of top end.
Cool vid - what is the second song he uses in these example? I know the first one is "Armed and Ready" by MSG.BigBellyRocker":1obo3475 said:You have to pare the guitar pickups with the wood of your guitar. If the wood tone is on the bright side then maybe you have to choose something like a moderate output pickup to balance out the tone. If your guitar wood tone is on the low end then you should choose a higher output pickup. I have put in a Seymour Duncan TB5 into my Charvel Socal and the tone on this guitar has a lot of mids and no top end. The TB5 is a moderate output like the Custom Custom. I have also installed a Slash Alnico II pickup into another guitar and that sounded thin too. Both of these Charvel guitars has Alder as body wood. I'm assuming that your double cut guitar has a mahogany body so I would try a higher output pickup such as a Suhr Doug Aldrich. One of the forum member has posted a comparison of a Duncan Distortion vs a Suhr Doug Aldrich pickup below.
What?BigBellyRocker":3semjhnw said:You have to pare the guitar pickups with the wood of your guitar. If the wood tone is on the bright side then maybe you have to choose something like a moderate output pickup to balance out the tone. If your guitar wood tone is on the low end then you should choose a higher output pickup.