I have messed around with the pickup height, balancing out the highs and lows, then testing overdrive/clean levels with the pickup close/far away from the strings, and after reading Dan Erlewine's book I even tried to adjust the pole pieces on the pickips (just a half turn here and there) but still I cannot get to a point where I'm happy.
I usually run my Vox with the master flat out using a Hotplate so i can dial in as much/little gain as I want, but this still didn't help the situation, so I went the old-school route of using the amp in it's intended way, cutting the master volume, still no joy.
If my sound was mushy and lacked power before the change I wouldn't be here supposidly running these pickups down (which i hope I'm not) I'm trying to discover the reasons why they're not working for me as opposed to just stating some unhelpful childish insult as on many other forums

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It's just that I HAD a GOOD sound, swapped in the Mules for a GREAT sound, and came out the other side here, all lost and confused... :? I really want a handwound pickup to work, the whole lifetime aging ethos really appeals to me and I want to keep a pickup long enough for it to mellow and merge into one with the guitar. The quality of workmanship on these pickups is truley awe-inspiring and will deliver the goods for a very long time and could easily outlive me!
It may be a really sad statement, and I'm wincing even typing it, but could the answer be to re-wind these pickups as clones of my origional BB's? (shoot me now! :) ) I'm figuring, if I liked the BB's before, then maybe getting real close to their properties (magnet type and/or DC resistance etc) with the improved Bareknuckle workmanship and quality of parts, this could lead to a possible solution?