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"Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski
"Only two things are infinite - the universe, and human stupidity. And I'm not sure about the universe." - Albert Einstein
If single coil size, I have no idea. You're welcome.
At the moment I'm looking for:
* Hamer SS2 & T62
* Music Man Luke 1
Please drop me a message.
At the moment I'm looking for:
* Hamer SS2 & T62
* Music Man Luke 1
Please drop me a message.
removed
Blimey, definitely warm to me! Any warmer and it would be into dull territory.
Just goes to show how we're all different. I use the tone control on my guitar as well, so if you're locked at 10 all the time you might miss how it can be warm, but still have enough clarity - I assume that's why they call it the "jazz".
A Jazz is about as bright as neck humbuckers get.
Could it be mine was wired incorrectly perhaps? It had a coil split, and when split it was very thin.
Tone rolled down half way it made a lovely jazzy tone, maxed out it was less bright than, for example, my friend's slash pickup in the neck.
Bandcamp
There is a lot of adjectives in audio that are very metaphoric and seem to be used by different people to mean just about every variation possible.
I thought "warm" was one of the more clear cut ones but maybe not. In most cases I've heard it being used to mean fewer high frequencies and/or more low frequencies.
So to me it's impossible for something to be warm and bright, they're the opposite.
Or when someone said "warm without getting in to dull territory" - warm and dull (or more commonly dark) mean the same thing, just whether it's being seen as a pro or a con.