Bare Knuckle Pickups Forum
Forum Ringside => Pickups => Topic started by: StefanPrice on April 06, 2005, 03:09:59 PM
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Hi, Has any used both the Apaches and Sultans?
I am wondering what the difference is, I like the sound of both the Seymour Duncan Vintage and the Seymour Duncan Alnico pro 2's which are the the non-boutique versions of the BK Apaches and Sultans.
With the Sultans being Alnico 2 and therefore a softer magnet are the apaches more percussive and is this the only difference?
Stef.
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:) Hi, I would like to know more about the two variations, on polepiece heights 54 & 59 staggers that are use on the apaches depending on likeness, main differences is important. Thanks
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Hi, Has any used both the Apaches and Sultans?
I am wondering what the difference is, I like the sound of both the Seymour Duncan Vintage and the Seymour Duncan Alnico pro 2's which are the the non-boutique versions of the BK Apaches and Sultans.
With the Sultans being Alnico 2 and therefore a softer magnet are the apaches more percussive and is this the only difference?
Stef.
You find both the apache and Sultan sets are nothing like the SDs-the Apaches are wound with Heavy Formvar for starters and use Alnico III magnets-the tone is classic '50s punch although I've adjusted the bridge wind to make it balance out a bit better-these are my fav Strat coils-all the classic tones are here 8)
Sultans have a touch more power and brightness to them although the 42 AWG plain enamel keeps the mids nice and complex harmonically.
As with all our sets, I scatterwind them quite heavily and this really does help them sound so much more open than mass produced pickups.
If you're around at the London Guitar Show, stop by the stand and try out both-you really need to hear AND feel the difference for yourself.
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:) Hi, I would like to know more about the two variations, on polepiece heights 54 & 59 staggers that are use on the apaches depending on likeness, main differences is important. Thanks
In a nut shell the G pole is lower but there are small differences in the heights of all the magnets. INHO the '54 is a more useable stagger and I really like it but the '59 stagger has become the accepted norm which is fair enough. On the '59 the E and A are the same, the D and G the same, B lowest, the high E(sorry haven't got the exact measurements in front of me!)
I carry the '54 and '59 in Alnico V but only the '59 in Alnico III ate the moment.
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Hi Tim and Thanks for the information, Would you be making the '54 in Alnico III any time soon.
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Hi Tim and Thanks for the information, Would you be making the '54 in Alnico III any time soon.
I can grind some down for you if you want to try a '54 in Alnico III.
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Thanks for the information. I would like to change the '54 custom shop on my 50th anniversary Stratoscaster for these pickups. Do you have reference on how good it would sound if we make them with the '54 gauge and ALNICO III compared to the '54 ALNICO V and the 59 ALNICO V? What's your preference? Thanks again! Greetings from Mississippi!
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Thanks for the information. I would like to change the '54 custom shop on my 50th anniversary Stratoscaster for these pickups. Do you have reference on how good it would sound if we make them with the '54 gauge and ALNICO III compared to the '54 ALNICO V and the 59 ALNICO V? What's your preference? Thanks again! Greetings from Mississippi!
The '54 stagger simply imparts a slightly different balance of power string to string. Fender changed the stagger circa '56 to the slightly more uniform stagger that is commonly used now primarily to streamline production and have the E/A and D/G magnets the same.
I actually like the '54 stagger both tonally and aesthetically but it's not everyones cup of tea.
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Tim, I mean't that the Apaches are your version of 50's Vintage pups and the SD Vintage are their version.
Is that right?
There are a couple of other things,
Could you tell me if apart from the heavy Scatterwinding resulting in a more open sound, are there other big difference between the Sultans, and the SD AP2.
Its the AP2 that Mark has used in his red Schecter strat since 1984/85 when he changed from the SD Vintage, to Alnico pro 2, but if your sultans are virtually the same but with the hand-made advantages I would choose yours.
Are yours called sultans because of the Alnico 2 magnets in Marks Schecter?
Lastly, are the original Fender pickups, Alnico 3 or 5?
Sorry theres so many questions.
I hope to meet you at the show.
Regards, Stefan.
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Tim, I mean't that the Apaches are your version of 50's Vintage pups and the SD Vintage are their version.
Is that right?
There are a couple of other things,
Could you tell me if apart from the heavy Scatterwinding resulting in a more open sound, are there other big difference between the Sultans, and the SD AP2.
Its the AP2 that Mark has used in his red Schecter strat since 1984/85 when he changed from the SD Vintage, to Alnico pro 2, but if your sultans are virtually the same but with the hand-made advantages I would choose yours.
Are yours called sultans because of the Alnico 2 magnets in Marks Schecter?
Lastly, are the original Fender pickups, Alnico 3 or 5?
Sorry theres so many questions.
I hope to meet you at the show.
Regards, Stefan.
I don't think even Seymour would profess to claim that AP II's are his take on a '50s spec -wrong wire, wrong wind, wrong magnets. The AP IIs were intended as a 'vintagey' sounding single coil.
The difference between the Sultans and the AP II's is ours are scatterwound, the wind is different as is the wire, so all in it's a quite a different pickup. I've gone for plain enamel wire, late '60s spec, simply because it sounds alot better than solderable poly that the AP IIs are machine wound with.
The Sultans are so called because of the overall vibe rather than trying to copy one particular tone. I'm 100% certain you'd prefer the tone of either the Sultans or the Apaches over AP IIs-I've rewound over 20 sets of AP IIs for customers since xmas, converting them to Sultan spec and every customer has commented on the difference being remarkable.
The detail is in the mid range, poly wire and machine winding produces a spikey and grainy mid with poor note definition. Scatterwinding and plain enamel or Heavy Formvar yields a much more dynamically responsive pickup with richer harmonic detail.
So many people ask me 'is there really that much difference just in the wire' and the simple answer is,yes, you'd have to be deaf not to notice!
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(Tim) you'd have to be deaf not to notice!
Pardon?
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Who said that? :D
You know what I mean though Ron-you've heard it for yourself!
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(Tim) You know what I mean though Ron-you've heard it for yourself!
I have indeed! For what I am playing at the moment (50's/60's/70's, from Shads/Beatles to Kinks/Rolling Stones/Hendrix/Cream, bit of blues) the Apaches cover the ground better than anything I've heard or tried so far. And everyone who's tried them hears the same thing - quality.
However I don't believe it's just the wire, or the magnets, or the scatterwinding, I think you are sacrificing virgins (imported, obviously!) every night to keep the Mojo going........ :twisted: Whatever, it's succeeding.
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(Tim) You know what I mean though Ron-you've heard it for yourself!
I have indeed! For what I am playing at the moment (50's/60's/70's, from Shads/Beatles to Kinks/Rolling Stones/Hendrix/Cream, bit of blues) the Apaches cover the ground better than anything I've heard or tried so far. And everyone who's tried them hears the same thing - quality.
However I don't believe it's just the wire, or the magnets, or the scatterwinding, I think you are sacrificing virgins (imported, obviously!) every night to keep the Mojo going........ :twisted: Whatever, it's succeeding.
They do that sort of thing in Devon, don't they???
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They do that sort of thing in Devon, don't they???
Aarrrrr, so Oi believe. The black art of pickup making.........
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We haven't found virgins around here for years :twisted: :twisted: :twisted: :twisted:
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Thanks Tim.
I know that the SD AP2 are not a vintage pickup, I don't think that Fender used Alnico 2 did they.
I was refering to the Vintage SD's being his take on the vintage Fender
although Fender changed their pickups through the 50's and so on.
Sorry, my posts do often seem a bit muddled.
I hope to go to the London guitar show, so I will see you there!
Regards, Stef.