T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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272.1 | You can't teach an old humbucker new tricks... | BPOV10::LEAHY | | Mon Jun 08 1987 13:09 | 12 |
| Why are some people so hung up on Gibson Humbuckers?
(oops, didn't mean to IGNITE... %^)
I tend to believe that the pickups have less to do w/sound than
the guitar itself (unless you wanna talk about the DANELECTRO line).
"A Gibson Humbucker by any other name would sound as sweet..."???
Jon (BPOV02::NELSON)
|
272.2 | Remember the Baby Humbuckers ? | 3224::PELKEY | New Personal_Name Sought.. | Mon Jun 08 1987 14:03 | 37 |
| I had a 1970 Les Paul Deluxe that had them Gibson Baby Humbuckers.
Anyone remember them ? Those were real nice hot sounding pickups.
I was gonna put some Dimazio's in it, but the Dimazio's I
had bought didn't fit the holes that the baby humbukers were in.
So before I started to butcher a nice Les Paul, I tried a modified
one with Dimazio's. I like the sound of the stock pickups much
better. So I left em in. I can't say it was the wood cuz both
guitars were Deluxe Gold Tops.
When I finnaly decided to sell the guitar,one of the reasons that sold
it the quickest was baecause I'd left the baby humbukcers in. I
assume the other reason was it's imaculate condition. Though it was a
beautiful sounding axe, I used to have all kinds of fun keeping it in tune.
I'm sorry I sold that one, it played so nice. By todays standars, a
Kahler or Floyd Rose would have solved the tuning problem. Should-a
hung on to it. Like I should have done for my old Strat, Tele, etc...
:(
Wish I still had every good guitar I've ever owned. It would make a
fine collection. Todays new guitars seem to manufactured so
differently. Mass production. Cheaper finishes on some...
Back in the old days, you really got a nice axe, for a reasonable
price. There's some real great guitars out today, but when I think
of the old guitars I had... I still wish I had the good ones.
To replace them today, you could have bought two of each for the
price of one today. And personnaly, on guitars like the new Fenders
the old ones are so much better.
Too bad the going prices on the mint ones are 1,500 to 2,000 dollars.
|
272.3 | Allow me to disagree. | 3224::PELKEY | New Personal_Name Sought.. | Mon Jun 08 1987 14:07 | 11 |
| <I tend to believe that the pickups have less to do w/sound than
<the guitar itself (unless you wanna talk about the DANELECTRO line).
I disagree. The qualities of the wood DO have an effect on the
sound, but the pickups are the main factor in a guitars sound.
Not only does the wood have an effect, but the finish makes a
difference too. It's still the pickups that give the axe it's voice.
<Why are some people so hung up on Gibson Humbuckers?
T.E.H.O.
|
272.4 | | AKAMAI::BOUCHARD | OA$SURF | Mon Jun 08 1987 19:58 | 25 |
| I tend to agree w/ .3
A possible list of those things which influence the sound:
- placement of the pickup
- type of strings
- bridge type
- density of the guitar body
- guitar body material
- type pickup
- finish
and other minor things such as the material and thickness of the guitar pick
used, the nut type, etc....
Of all those listed I feel the pickup type has the most influence.
q: Why do people love Gibson Humbuckers?
a: Because they're great pickups
q: Why do some people spend $2000+ to obtain and play early starts?
a: Beats the hell out of me. They're great guitars but worth $2000+ ???
Joel
|
272.5 | Ask Seymour !!! | MORRIS::JACQUES | | Tue Jun 09 1987 13:58 | 34 |
| Seymour Duncan has a pretty good explanation of how pickups work
in his catalog. When he talks about "vintage" pickups he mentions
how pickups lose some of there magnetic field with age, and
eventually become real warm and mellow sounding, at the expense
of some of the original brightness and bight. Seymour Duncan
has a patented process known as "Duncan Aged" which supposedly
yields a very authentic replica of "vintage pickups". He makes
all kinds of pickups. Some are really hot screamers for people
who play heavy medal or otherwise want to scream. He also makes
a replica of the old Gibson P.A.F.'s (Patent applied for)
humbucker, like those found on the 1959 Les Paul Standard,
as well as replicas of the vintage Strat, Telecaster, and
Broadcaster pickups. He makes so many different kinds of
pickups, chances are he makes one that will give you the
sound you want. The nice thing about his products is
that you can alter your guitar to get the sound you want
without hacking it up to accomidate larger pickups. Then
later on if you decide to sell the guitar, you can put
the original pickups back in and return the guitar to it's
original condition and value.
I agree with the people who stated that the pickups have the
most dramatic effect on the sound compared with the body,
however the body does have a significant effect just the
same. Especially if you compare Solid body with hollow bodied
instruments. If you compare the sound of a Les Paul and that
of a 335, with identical pickups, the 335 will sound warmer,
while the Les Paul will sound brighter and will have more
sustain.
Mark Jacques
LM02/Marlboro
|
272.6 | but-but-but.. | HAMSTR::PELKEY | New Personal_Name Sought.. | Wed Jun 10 1987 12:33 | 16 |
| Reply to :
< I agree with the people who stated that the pickups have the
< most dramatic effect on the sound compared with the body,
< however the body does have a significant effect just the
< same.
No one said this wasn't the case. The subject asrouse when
a profound statement was aired, somethig to the fact, that pickups
had less to do with the sound than most everything else.
Just an opinion, sure, but not one that I thought held much
truth.
In-search-of..
/ray
|
272.7 | ok, so sorry... | BPOV10::LEAHY | | Mon Jun 15 1987 13:00 | 12 |
| Then perhaps someone more knowledgeble than myself would care to
explain what characteristics of a pickup make one sound different
from another. Fixed magnets vs. screw-type, # of wraps/thickness
of coil, strength of magnet, etc... Are they all that different?
Not being an EE, I understand the physical differences but have
trouble explaining the difference in output. Also, what's the
purpose of sheilding over the pickup (i.e. washburn)?, how do the
DANELECTRO's (single bar) work? Food & more food for thought...?
Jon (BPOV02::NELSON)
|
272.8 | How Danelectros Work | AQUA::ROST | This space available | Mon Jun 15 1987 14:28 | 12 |
| Re: -.7
How do Danelectro pickups work? Real well...
Seriously, Danelectro was the first company to totally shield their
guitars, back somewhere around 1957.
Amazingly enough, my Danelectro guitar and bass use the same pickup!
The company's main philosophy was low cost but not at the expense
of quality. How many other $37.95 guitars do you see still in action
after 20 or 30 years?
|
272.9 | | HAMSTR::PELKEY | Goodnight Mrs. Kalabash, where ever you are | Wed Jun 17 1987 14:13 | 1 |
| Personally, I always thought it was the cords :)
|
272.10 | If I only had a time machine | BMT::COMAROW | | Wed Jun 17 1987 22:37 | 7 |
| For whatever reason, they they sound sweet at both low and high
volume. It's not because they're dirty or old, the old PAFs had
a sweet sound that I haven't heard duplicated.
Believe it or not I had a 57 Gibson 175 with PAFs that I traded
even for a 59 Sunburst Les Paul Delux, which I sold for $500 in
1973. Wish I had both of 'em today.
|
272.11 | What I'd give for a '57 175 | AKAMAI::BOUCHARD | OA$SURF | Sat Jun 20 1987 19:13 | 7 |
| Yeeks! a '57? Any idea what that would go for today?
Not being a historian of Gibson, I was wondering ... Did Gibson
at some point in time change their design on the humbucker? - and
I'm not referring to the smaller scale hunbuckers that they put
on the later model LP deluxes.
Joel
|
272.12 | ...because they are !!! | ROCKET::ABATELLI | | Wed Jun 24 1987 18:17 | 14 |
|
We can hold on to everything forever ! Some things we keep, some
we let go. How does one know that the thing we just sold for $400.
won't be worth $2000. someday. I could have bought a '62 corvette
for $1000. Perfect condition and totally stock. I didn't though.
What a mistake !!! :^(
I have a '69 or '70 Les Paul Custom cherry sunburst that has a great
sound and the original p/u's still in place. I love the sound. It
has the tone I want and like. It all stems to what YOU like.
Everybody's different. Stick with something that works for you.
I won't be ever selling that guitar.
Why are the p/u's so good... because they are !!
Fred
|
272.13 | Not concerned about $ in market place | AKAMAI::BOUCHARD | OA$SURF | Fri Jun 26 1987 00:41 | 10 |
| I wasn't thinking so much about the value as I was the quality.
If you are going to keep the instrument forever then who cares about
what the dollar value is? Recently, a friend of my purchased an
inexpensive Korean made bass. Time will tell about its quality
as it appears at first glance to be made adequately. However, the
unique sound it produces will stand up to most any other bass I've
heard.
Joel
|
272.14 | Baby hummers vs. PAF's.... | RAVEN1::DANDREA | Fry Zsa Zsa, Free James Brown | Wed Nov 29 1989 14:46 | 8 |
| I'm on a curiosity binge now that I'm back in the Gibson business. My
Les Paul deluxe has "baby" humbuckers. They seem to have the same fat
tone, mellow sound, high response as the regular P.A.F.'s, but they're
size would indicate that they have fewer windings (I'm guessing here).
What is the diff between "babies" and the P.A.F.'s?
Steve
|
272.15 | Anyone home...? | RAVEN1::DANDREA | Fry Zsa Zsa, Free James Brown | Fri Dec 01 1989 13:55 | 3 |
| Hello out there? No guesses/answers to question in 272.14?
Steve
|
272.16 | mini's | TOOTER::WEBER | | Mon Dec 04 1989 09:02 | 5 |
| Gibson Mini-humbuckers have a lower impedance than the standard size
humbuckers--about 6-6.k vs 7.8-8.5k. This gives them a somewhat
brighter, thinner tone than standard ones, and a somewhat lower output.
Danny W.
|
272.17 | thanks... | RAVEN1::DANDREA | Fry Zsa Zsa, Free James Brown | Mon Dec 04 1989 11:16 | 7 |
| Thinner and lower output than the regular humbuckers? Wow, they're
TWICE as hot and TWICE as fat as the pickups on my old strat! Amazing!
Thanks, Danny
Steve
|
272.18 | "new" model line!! | SUBPAC::GOLDIE | Resident Alien | Thu Feb 27 1997 16:34 | 9 |
|
did anyone notice the "new" line of Gibson Les Paul Gems?
they're basically a Les Paul that comes in 5 funky
colours(topaz,emerald,ruby etc....spot the common link?)they have p90
pick-ups and gold hardwear and list about $1.6k!
ian
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272.19 | | ASABET::pelkey.ogo.dec.com::pelkey | Professional Hombre | Fri Feb 28 1997 07:32 | 7 |
| not bad guitars for the money really...
If you're dead set on a Les Paul Standard, they might
not be the correct alternative, but for a USA made Gibson
with decent quality, I think they can be had for under a
grand.
|
272.20 | | SUBPAC::GOLDIE | Resident Alien | Fri Feb 28 1997 08:05 | 5 |
|
agreed although I don't think I really like P90'S
ian
|
272.21 | | ASABET::pelkey.ogo.dec.com::pelkey | Professional Hombre | Fri Feb 28 1997 11:44 | 5 |
| yea, well I have to agree there myself.. if I want
single coils, I most likely want the rest of the
package (strat sounds)...
|
272.22 | not your father's single coil | RICKS::CALCAGNI | thick slabs of dirt in a halo of airy twang | Fri Feb 28 1997 11:54 | 3 |
| I need to introduce you guyz to junior; he's got a lil ole
P90 that'll part your hair in three places
|
272.23 | | CTPCSA::GOODWIN | | Fri Feb 28 1997 11:56 | 9 |
| -1
don't sell 'em short... p90's were responsible for some cool sounds
in early rock&roll... they're not your typical single coil pickups,
they have a fat/thick, raunchy sound which to my ears is closer to a
humbucker than it is to a strat single coil... but I have to admit
that I do prefer les pauls with paf humbuckers.
/Steve
|
272.24 | | CTPCSA::GOODWIN | | Fri Feb 28 1997 11:57 | 5 |
| -1
notes collision Rick...., now my previous entry should read re: -2
/Steve
|
272.25 | certified PAF fan | SUBPAC::GOLDIE | Resident Alien | Sat Mar 01 1997 08:54 | 6 |
|
I'd rather have PAF!All the really good sounds I liked from PAF's!
ian
|
272.26 | P90's are sweet! | MILKWY::JACQUES | | Mon Mar 03 1997 08:22 | 13 |
| If you can afford to own more than 1 Gibson, it's a nice idea to
get a couple differant sounds from them.
I own 3 Gibson guitars with full-sized humbuckers (SG, ES345, ES175)
and one Firebird with mini-humbuckers. The Firebird has the best tone
IMHO. I'd love a Gibson with P90's.
A friend of mine had a 1962 Les Paul Special. These were double cut
guitars (like a PRS, or Hamer) with P90 soapbars and sounded sweet.
Only drawback of P90's is that (like any single coil pu) they tend to
hum a bit.
Mark
|