Wizard retiring...

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I just saw on the Wizard Pickups website that Andy is retiring to sail around the UK. Sad to hear, as he makes great pickups and is good to customers. I wish him the best of luck.

But now he's gone, who else do you recommend for pickups?
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  • mike_lmike_l Frets: 5700

    Bulldog @Van_Hayden I have one in my Jackson and it's awesomes.

    Oil City @Guitarweasel not tried one, but keep hearing good things

    Ringleader of the Cambridge cartel, pedal champ and king of the dirt boxes (down to 21) 

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  • BidleyBidley Frets: 2952
    Jaime at The Creamery is excellent too.
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  • OilCityPickupsOilCityPickups Frets: 11104
    tFB Trader
    Sad to hear of a fellow 'winder of the blessed bobbins of happiness' hanging up his potting trousers. I'd heard good things about Andy myself. Hope he has a great time in retirement though ...
    Professional pickup winder, horse-testpilot and recovering Chocolate Hobnob addict.
    Formerly TheGuitarWeasel ... Oil City Pickups  ... Oil City Blog 7 String.org profile and message  

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  • Van_HaydenVan_Hayden Frets: 438
    Thanks @mike_l - I need to have a look at @Guitarweasel s pickups, new to me since I was last on Music Radar! (still waiting for a reply as to why my user name got locked, think it was 2008...) from his posts he seems like a nice chap - unlike some winders...

    Andy was a bit of a legend - him and people like Jim Cairns were the old guard when it came to pickups. In fact without Wizard there probably wouldn't have been a BKP, but that's another story.
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  • OilCityPickupsOilCityPickups Frets: 11104
    tFB Trader
    I just e mailed Andy wishing him a happy retirement. Totally agree that without his groundwork, and that of the old guard, we wouldn't be doing what we do and slaving over the hot copper :)



    Professional pickup winder, horse-testpilot and recovering Chocolate Hobnob addict.
    Formerly TheGuitarWeasel ... Oil City Pickups  ... Oil City Blog 7 String.org profile and message  

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  • monquixotemonquixote Frets: 17872
    tFB Trader
    mike_l said:

    Bulldog @Van_Hayden I have one in my Jackson and it's awesomes.

    Oil City @Guitarweasel not tried one, but keep hearing good things

    I have some of each in my strat and both are marvelous.
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  • siremoonsiremoon Frets: 1524
    Another endorsement for Oil City.  The ones I've got are excellent :)
    “He is like a man with a fork in a world of soup.” - Noel Gallagher
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  • JookyChapJookyChap Frets: 4234
    Shame to hear that - I've had a few sets of Wizard pups and they have been excellent...

    One more for the hat from me is Mojo Pickups - plenty of innovation as well as all the classics

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  • OilCityPickupsOilCityPickups Frets: 11104
    tFB Trader
    At some point I intend to do a 'History of pickup winding' either here, or on my blog. My hat comes off to all the early pioneers in this country ... it was nowhere near as easy to get parts even five years ago ... and 'way back' there was practically no information available either. Guys like John Birch operated in pretty much a total vacuum in the seventies. I think nothing of ordering kilos of wire from the US ... and chatting via e mail to suppliers and indeed customers all over the world ... it must have been so much different 'back in the day'.
    Professional pickup winder, horse-testpilot and recovering Chocolate Hobnob addict.
    Formerly TheGuitarWeasel ... Oil City Pickups  ... Oil City Blog 7 String.org profile and message  

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  • Van_HaydenVan_Hayden Frets: 438
    JookyChap;10729" said:
    Shame to hear that - I've had a few sets of Wizard pups and they have been excellent...



    One more for the hat from me is Mojo Pickups - plenty of innovation as well as all the classics
    And they're just down the road and I didn't realise - that's how much of a bubble you can get stuck in making pickups....

    It's true it's much easier to get hold of parts, I'd have found it hard to set Bulldog up without knowing all the BKP suppliers. And BKP would have found it hard without guys like Bharrat who really did their research.

    At one point practically ever luthier was making or repairing pickups in this country. And some were remarkably ingenious.
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  • JookyChapJookyChap Frets: 4234
    That's a book there Ash...drop Backbeat a line :)

    What I like with the pickup makers over here is the fact that they will try different things rather than just try and replicate the-perfect-PAF(tm).

    Wizard did one called (iirc) a Novatron which had this whole Resonator sound going on, which was completely different, and you and Mojo are both pushing things in different directions, which is cool.

    What always amazes me is guitarists not wanting anything apart from the 'Classic Tones' . Other than being in a cover band I'd have thought people would be looking for something new/different, but it doesn't seem the way of things, which always seems odd to me. The average painter would take your arm off for a new colour.

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  • OilCityPickupsOilCityPickups Frets: 11104
    tFB Trader
    I was lucky in one sense ... my father being an old school engineer who drummed into me lateral thinking ... I resorted to basics when I started: all my early flatwork was done the hard way ... with laboriously built 'plugs' and a router 'following' the masters. I still do new prototypes like that sometimes ... by god it's messy  :)
    Professional pickup winder, horse-testpilot and recovering Chocolate Hobnob addict.
    Formerly TheGuitarWeasel ... Oil City Pickups  ... Oil City Blog 7 String.org profile and message  

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  • ICBMICBM Frets: 73027
    Guys like John Birch operated in pretty much a total vacuum in the seventies.
    I think he was operating in an atmosphere of hallucinogenic vapour, given some of the things he did to guitars :).

    I agree a lot of these guys were innovators though, whether out of necessity or just because they had different ideas.

    "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

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  • OilCityPickupsOilCityPickups Frets: 11104
    tFB Trader
    I know there is much criticism of John for his 'butchery' of name American instruments ... and some of his design ... er ... touches on his own instruments. But he was a pioneer, along with Jim Burns, Charley Watkins and a host that followed. Innovation is innovation ... whether out of neccessity or visionary thinking. We've always done rather well at 'making the best of' in Britain.
    Professional pickup winder, horse-testpilot and recovering Chocolate Hobnob addict.
    Formerly TheGuitarWeasel ... Oil City Pickups  ... Oil City Blog 7 String.org profile and message  

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  • ICBMICBM Frets: 73027
    I agree, but some of his work borders on deliberate vandalism. There was no sensible reason for a lot of it, and the workmanship was often poor which makes it even less excusable.

    "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

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  • impmannimpmann Frets: 12720
    You forgot Jack Golder, Ash...

    I wish Andy all the best for retirement - I've had some of his pickups and they were first rate, along with his customer service/helpfulness.

    In terms of pickup winders, though - I still think it was Kent Armstrong who really pioneered the "we can wind anything you want" ethic in the UK.  As I used to live in Kent he was fairly local (before he sold up and bailed out to the US) and I've had many of his units over the years - not those cheapy Korean/Far Eastern made things - in fact, I still have a pair of his overwound humbuckers in one of my Teles. 

    IIRC, Andy (Wizard) took over the rewinding business from Kent when he left the UK, and Kent sold the name 'Kent Armstrong' to the far east along with some of his more popular designs. And I think originally Andy called the business Wizard Rewinds... 

    But hey, many beers have flowed since then so my memory might not be spot on!! 
    B-)
    Never Ever Bloody Anything Ever.

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  • mike_lmike_l Frets: 5700
    Thanks @mike_l -
     
    I wouldn't say it if I didn't mean it.

    Ringleader of the Cambridge cartel, pedal champ and king of the dirt boxes (down to 21) 

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  • OilCityPickupsOilCityPickups Frets: 11104
    tFB Trader
    Damn ... how could I have missed out Jack Golder!
    I had a pair of Kent's hand wound humbuckers in the Manson Eagle I used to own. They were absolutely fabulous ...
    To me it's sad that his stock has been a little devalued amongst younger guitarists by the cheap Far Eastern products that have his name all over them.
    Professional pickup winder, horse-testpilot and recovering Chocolate Hobnob addict.
    Formerly TheGuitarWeasel ... Oil City Pickups  ... Oil City Blog 7 String.org profile and message  

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  • Van_HaydenVan_Hayden Frets: 438
    Shergold. That's a blast from the past.
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  • impmannimpmann Frets: 12720
    edited August 2013
    Totally agree, Ash. His handwound stuff was *seriously* good - the pickups in my guitar were spec'd to sound like Bernie Marsden's Beast (ie PAF with a bit more bite) but being encapsulated in resin so I could run monster amounts of gain without squeeling live. And, whilst I've never played Bernie's burst, I used to be able to get quite close to the tone of the original Whitesnake stuff with those in a Les Paul. In fact, I'm giving thought to taking them out of the Tele and slinging them into another LP, as the top end really sings in one...

    Shergold - wonderful guitars. Now *they* have unusual pickups... really unusual! The Re-An humbucker has a tone unlike anything else, due to its very odd construction. They don't sound like any any other guitar as a result - and that makes them interesting. Can you tell I'm a fan...
    Never Ever Bloody Anything Ever.

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