Done! Installed! after a few hours of work - I was also replacing the bridge, tuners, installing straplocks, all from Guitar Fetish.
I've only done soldering, guitar modding a few times in my life and I'm not too good at schematics/electronics, so I was really taking my time. Also the control cavity was cramped and I only had a thick solder tip.
Anywho, they're installed and working. I went with just humbucking mode for now (no coil-splitting), just a standard Les Paul wiring.
The guitar is Brownsville GG1 "vintage" sunburst (more like "honey" or "amber" sunburst, I like it) - an imitation take on Les Paul Standard.
The stock pickups were actually quite good, but somewhat sterile. I guess that's the term usually used to describe ceramics.
the Dream 180's definitely have something happening. Some kind of warmness or sweetness, quite subtle, but enough to notice. The guitar now sounds VERY les-paulish.
I haven't had a chance to play around with much overdrive and different settings. I don't own a tube amp, so I'll be using
my Behringer GDI21 (SansAmp GT2 knockoff) to test-drive it until I can play it through somebody's tube amp. GDI21 itself was pretty good at adding warmness and sparkle, but I think now it's more complex. I don't have a great ear for this as I don't compare many guitars and haven't really played with the stock pickups that much either.
Stock pickups had a lot of impedance difference:
neck: 8.67 kOhm
bridge: 16.54 kOhm
the Dream 180's are:
neck: 11.5 kOhm
bridge: 13+ kOhm so a little better matched, I guess, I don't know how it should be.
I'll have to post some pics, it really looks nice now!
Also, I gotta give it to Jay of GuitarFetish.com - good parts. The "locking tuners" are not really locking like Schallers, but then they aren't $70 either. They simply have 2 stringpost holes at 90-degree angle. Still, much better than the stock - those were truly cheesy. Stayed in tune, but cheesy-feeling.
The screw holes "almost" matched. I was worried at first, but then just screwed in the little screws at slight angle - the way they wanted to go and it's fine and tight.
Strap-locks are as nice as Sperzels. I like Schaller's design better, but again, 1/2 the price.
The bridge too was nice - those "large bushings" or whatever, the actual pins that you drive into the wood - were a much tighter fit than stock. The stock ones I just pulled out by hand. These I hammered in gently and there's no removing them without a tool now. The bridge is a bit more massive, with sturdier saddles (not clunky) and no stupid spring bracket, which is a pain to install, when you need to reverse the saddles.
I can now begin to enjoy my guitar to the full, a veritable les paul, at about $296 all together
this guitar is a "kit", just like those Epiphones. Epis are nice, but cost way more. their stock parts are about the same - tuners, bridge and pickups are throw-aways. they're probably even made at the same factory.