I recently came across a pair of Gibson 61 pickups which are described as part of the burstbucker family (which have mismatched coils) with the screw coil having more turns as opposed to the normal slug coil which apparently is the dominant coil due to the "slugs having more steel".
I've never really liked the neck pickup on my SG as it's position makes it too "woody". So in the interest of science, I swapped the pickup orientation so that the slug coil was closer to the neck with the result being way more of the creaminess I like about a neck pickup. I'm not a fan of the look, but the sound is IMO much better.
I'd love the opinion of our resident pickup gurus thoughts on Gibson's blurb.
@Alegree @TheGuitarWeasel
Comments
I have always found the sound of a vintage style humbucker in the neck/Rhythm position of an SG a bit meh. In my opinion, a P90 does a better job of the "creaminess" - especially through overdriven valve amplification.
I would take this notion to its logical conclusion by installing a DiMarzio DP163 Bluesbucker. That way, the polepieces of the stronger coil are in the "right" place.
If you do not care for exposed polepieces being in the "wrong" places, consider changing to pickups with fully closed covers. e.g. Gibson Iommi signature humbucker or an out-sized vintage Firebird type design.
My very favourite pickup pairing on an SG was the Bare Knuckle 'Pig 90 set. Crank the pre- and power amplifier stages of a valve amplifier, play, adjust the guitar's volume and tone pots to taste, play some more, grin hugely.