Stupid pickup question

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Farview

Farview

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I recently picked up a guitar again. I don't know why, I stopped playing in the mid 90's.

Anyway, my prefered set up was a humbucker in the bridge position (custom wound pickup that was made for me back in the late 80's) and the bridge pickup out of a 70's strat in the neck position.

I was always playing explorers, flying V's, Iceman type guitars and always just had to shoe-horn the single coil into the humbucker bezel. I want to see if I can avoid that by just coil tapping a humbucker.

So my question is, which humbucker sounds most like a strat pickup when coil tapped? That sort of 'deep and bright' thing that old strats tend to have.
 
I know. The only reason I never used that was because it didn't exist 25 years ago when I started doing it and I had the same two main guitars until I was done playing. If it aint broke...

If at all possible, I would like to keep the stock look of the guitar AND add the humbucking neck pickup sound to arsenal.
 
So my question is, which humbucker sounds most like a strat pickup when coil tapped? That sort of 'deep and bright' thing that old strats tend to have.
None of them, especially not an "old strat" sound. Half a humbucker does not equal a single coil; the construction is different. A good single coil will have pole pieces that are magnets themselves. A humbucker will have plain metal pole pieces with bar magnets on the bottom (the same way really cheap single coils are made - ie the ones that don't sound right). They work differently and sound different as a result. You might find something that sounds okay, but you'll never get a proper single coil tone from half a humbucker.

I notice you said "most like" so really, how about a humbucker sized p-90?
 
DiMarzio Bluesbucker. My favorite neck pickup for LP's, and mahogany neck + body guitars. Its intended to be P-90ish with both coils, when split, its more strat-like and does not lose volume. Only one coil is actually active, the 2nd coil does not have magnets. It sounds good to me either way.
 
Nice! I'll have to check into that.

I normally only use the single coil for clean sounds with the volume backed way off. That way I can switch for clean to dirty just by flipping the pickup selector. Most humbuckers in single coil mode are a little midrange heavy for what I'm going for.

All this might be for nothing if I end up going with a different amp. Right now I'm using my 23 year old Laney 20th anniversary head. If I keep playing, I'll probably end up with something else, maybe something with channel switching...
 
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