Pickup Recommendations?
Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
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- Posts: 42
- Joined: 11 Jan 2010 12:25 pm
- Location: Atlanta, GA
Pickup Recommendations?
Hi Guys-
I'm having some pretty persistent trouble dialing in my treble settings and I'm hoping that maybe a pickup change might help.
Here's my signal chain:
La Garritt/Rittenberry E9, SD-10
George L E-66
Hilton VP
Strymon Big Sky
Strymon El Capistan
Fender Twin (SF '74)
- Approx Settings: T 3.25, M 7.5, B 4.0, Brite Off
- RCA short plate, GE Long Plate 12ax7s, among others.
- TAD WGC-STR 6L6's
- Altec 418B 15" speaker
- Rick Johnson Custom Pine Cab
Fwiw, I'm usually really happy with my tone picking a little further away from the bridge, but things tend to get peaky/harsh when I run out of room fretting anywhere above 10. I use nickel wound strings and my guitar has no problem with a .12g 3rd. I pick relatively hard, and also really like the sound and feel of this guitar unamplified, so I'm hoping to find a solution that doesn't involve a big investment in a new guitar
I've also noticed - all else equal - the George L is very hot. Significantly louder than other guitars plugged into my rig. Even lowered down as far as it can go. Between that and the Hilton I can overdrive the heck out of v1 if I'm not careful.
I've also tried using longer cables and tweaking the tone setting on the Hilton, but could not find a sweet spot that didn't sap too much of the nice, friendly overtones.
Thanks in advance for any help.
Patrick
I'm having some pretty persistent trouble dialing in my treble settings and I'm hoping that maybe a pickup change might help.
Here's my signal chain:
La Garritt/Rittenberry E9, SD-10
George L E-66
Hilton VP
Strymon Big Sky
Strymon El Capistan
Fender Twin (SF '74)
- Approx Settings: T 3.25, M 7.5, B 4.0, Brite Off
- RCA short plate, GE Long Plate 12ax7s, among others.
- TAD WGC-STR 6L6's
- Altec 418B 15" speaker
- Rick Johnson Custom Pine Cab
Fwiw, I'm usually really happy with my tone picking a little further away from the bridge, but things tend to get peaky/harsh when I run out of room fretting anywhere above 10. I use nickel wound strings and my guitar has no problem with a .12g 3rd. I pick relatively hard, and also really like the sound and feel of this guitar unamplified, so I'm hoping to find a solution that doesn't involve a big investment in a new guitar
I've also noticed - all else equal - the George L is very hot. Significantly louder than other guitars plugged into my rig. Even lowered down as far as it can go. Between that and the Hilton I can overdrive the heck out of v1 if I'm not careful.
I've also tried using longer cables and tweaking the tone setting on the Hilton, but could not find a sweet spot that didn't sap too much of the nice, friendly overtones.
Thanks in advance for any help.
Patrick
- Dave Campbell
- Posts: 647
- Joined: 31 Jul 2013 7:43 am
- Location: Nova Scotia, Canada
i think two things right away:
i use a '74 twin with an altec 418b as well. the mid control on the twin is more of a shift, and if i set mine past 5 the highs do get a bit shrill. if your altec is an 8 ohm and you haven't switched out your output transformer, the mids are affected and the tone is harder to dial in (for me, anyhow).
you might try an 12at7 in the 2nd tube position. with the hilton and the george l things might be a bit hot.
i'm pretty happy with my telonics pickup (206), and i'm keen on the fully adjustable teleonics 409.
i use a '74 twin with an altec 418b as well. the mid control on the twin is more of a shift, and if i set mine past 5 the highs do get a bit shrill. if your altec is an 8 ohm and you haven't switched out your output transformer, the mids are affected and the tone is harder to dial in (for me, anyhow).
you might try an 12at7 in the 2nd tube position. with the hilton and the george l things might be a bit hot.
i'm pretty happy with my telonics pickup (206), and i'm keen on the fully adjustable teleonics 409.
- Tim Whitlock
- Posts: 1768
- Joined: 3 Jan 2001 1:01 am
- Location: Colorado, USA
A couple ideas:
Run the pickup distance to about 5mm (3 quarters in a stack). Output will drop a little, but tone will be smoother
Use input #2
I run the bass up until it gets "woofy", then back it off a titch, mids a bit lower than the bass, treble a bit lower than the mids.
Run the pickup distance to about 5mm (3 quarters in a stack). Output will drop a little, but tone will be smoother
Use input #2
I run the bass up until it gets "woofy", then back it off a titch, mids a bit lower than the bass, treble a bit lower than the mids.
2 pedal steels, a lapStrat, and an 8-string Dobro (and 3 ukes)
More amps than guitars, and not many effects
More amps than guitars, and not many effects
- Bob Hoffnar
- Posts: 9244
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Austin, Tx
- Contact:
And I overlooked the E66. Either one of Bob Hoffnar's Tonealigner pickups, 705 or a Truetone.
I don't mind the tone of the E-66, but its attack suppresses the soul. Even if the tone is pleasing, the experience is not.
I don't mind the tone of the E-66, but its attack suppresses the soul. Even if the tone is pleasing, the experience is not.
2 pedal steels, a lapStrat, and an 8-string Dobro (and 3 ukes)
More amps than guitars, and not many effects
More amps than guitars, and not many effects
- Greg Thompson
- Posts: 247
- Joined: 8 Dec 2016 8:05 pm
- Location: Taumarunui, New Zealand
Pickup Recommendations?
I have a Lawrence 705 re-Issue that would do the job. Check my post - GregT
+1Bob Hoffnar wrote:Or turn the mids all the way up and treble around 4 , bass around 3.
I'm a fan of running the mids up, and balancing the
'center freq.' with the bass and treble... as the mids go up on my Twin, the overall sound gets 'brighter'.. so turning down the treble is in order on some (but not all) guitars. Maybe mids up, treble 3 and bass 4?
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- Posts: 1759
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- Location: Madison, TN
Hard to beat the tone of a passive volume pedal and single coil pickup. It's true that things can get a little buzzy but I've only had that be a problem in venues that aren't real venues anyway, where the light and sound systems are on one circuit, so I don't worry too much about those times. Been really happy with the Stratospheric clones that Todd Clinesmith made for me. It's a really fat single coil sound.
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- Posts: 42
- Joined: 11 Jan 2010 12:25 pm
- Location: Atlanta, GA
Thanks for all the replies. You guys never disappoint.
Per Lane's suggestion, I took another look at the pickup height. I've got it lowered as far as it can go, but that's still only 3.5mm (two quarters).
It's kinda hard to see in the pic, but there are two little bolted on pieces on both sides that won't allow the outside edges of the pickup to lower past that point.
Per Lane's suggestion, I took another look at the pickup height. I've got it lowered as far as it can go, but that's still only 3.5mm (two quarters).
It's kinda hard to see in the pic, but there are two little bolted on pieces on both sides that won't allow the outside edges of the pickup to lower past that point.
- Marco Schouten
- Posts: 1866
- Joined: 30 Mar 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Amsterdam, The Netherlands
The E66 can be closer to the strings than eg a BL 710. Probably because of the plastic casing. So 3.5 mm should be enough. I would't change it to a BL710, that pu was designed for a pot pedal and you use a Hilton. The Telonics pickups are designed for active pedals, so that might be a good choice.
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JCH SD-10 with BL XR-16 pickup, Sho-Bud Volume Pedal, Evidence Audio Lyric HG cables, Quilter Steelaire combo
JCH SD-10 with BL XR-16 pickup, Sho-Bud Volume Pedal, Evidence Audio Lyric HG cables, Quilter Steelaire combo
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- Posts: 42
- Joined: 11 Jan 2010 12:25 pm
- Location: Atlanta, GA
Thanks Marco. I was thinking about a BL 705 or the Telonics 409. I'd also be happy to buy a tonealigner if **cough** Bob H starts building them again.Marco Schouten wrote:The E66 can be closer to the strings than eg a BL 710. Probably because of the plastic casing. So 3.5 mm should be enough. I would't change it to a BL710, that pu was designed for a pot pedal and you use a Hilton. The Telonics pickups are designed for active pedals, so that might be a good choice.
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The E-66 is the brightest of all George L pickups. It's meant to emulate a 1966 Emmons... you could hardly find more high-end presence. It works well in certain guitars but can be ice-picky in other rigs that are naturally brighter.
If you want a darker tone, I would suggest you replace the E-66 with some of the suggestions others have made here. Really, almost any of the popular PSG pickups would be fatter than what you're running now.
The other big, easy change would be the amp EQ knobs. Don't be afraid to grab that treble knob and take it WAY down. Close your eyes and adjust it. If it ends up on, say, 1, so be it. And obviously, you want the bright switch off if you've got too much high end...
If you want a darker tone, I would suggest you replace the E-66 with some of the suggestions others have made here. Really, almost any of the popular PSG pickups would be fatter than what you're running now.
The other big, easy change would be the amp EQ knobs. Don't be afraid to grab that treble knob and take it WAY down. Close your eyes and adjust it. If it ends up on, say, 1, so be it. And obviously, you want the bright switch off if you've got too much high end...
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