Huge-long-post-alert! (You know the drill, AndyR "New" days usually involve lots of text, no pics... ... but I seem to have truely surpassed myself this time!! :oops: :lol:)
Took a little trip down to Jonathan's (Feline Guitars) yesterday and bagged me some BKP goodies for a couple of my strats.
After a few hours soldering and setting up when I got home I was too knackered to post how ecstatic I was about the whole thing. But after demoing the affected guitars to Mrs R over coffee this morning, I'm even more impressed than I was last night.
Here we go, deep breath now...
New Pickups - ApachesFirst up, I've finally joined the ranks of the Apache users, and all I can say is... WOW!
If all I could have was one strat with one set of BKPs, I'd still want the ITs in my 60s Roadworn. But I can now understand why many people would plump for Apaches in the same situation.
The guitar is my Roadworn 50s. It's been home to my Sultans for a few months and I've been enjoying it a lot like that. For various reasons I'd decided they were coming out and the obvious replacement was Apache. I was expecting a slightly more rounded "50s" tone, but I was a little afraid that I might lose some of the instant Mark Knoplfleryness.
No worries :D... I'm still in tweak the pickup height mode, and will be on and off for some time, but the MKness is still there, just slightly more "authority" to the tone. The 2 and 4 positions don't "quack" as much (at least not so far) as the Sultans do in the same guitar (by the way, I went for stock middle, not RWRP on both sets). But that wasn't really what I was after, they quack more than I was expecting and that's a bonus. What I was after for this guitar now was the "spank" in the 1, 3 and 5 position. Oh goodness... that's exactly what I've got. It's so good that if this guitar only had a three-way switch,
I would not bother installing a 5 way.
I now have a new favourite BKP strat middle pickup. I know lots of folks don't "get" the middle pickup on an SSS strat, don't even use it. But I'm one of those strat players who expects to use the middle as their "stock" tone. I still love my previous favourite, the Sultan middle, but in this guitar, the Apache middle is the absolute bees-knees for me.
New Bridge - BKP Strat Bridge AssemblySo where did the Sultans go? Back to my Fiesta Red CIJ 62. This was #1 until I foolishly tried the Roadworns. She's been somewhat eclipsed since their arrival because she turned out to be a rather dark and muffled strat in comparison...
Not Any More! It's true, that steel-sh1t works in the bridge department! :lol:
I was a bit worried about doing this because I got the CIJ trem floating perfectly a couple of years back, and I've learnt to use a trem because of it. Would steel really make that much difference? And if it ain't broke... But I knew that her sustain block was zinc, and this might be a contributory factor to the darkness... I'd already been through replacing blocks and the problems of Metric versus Imperial measurements on the Roadworns, and the best bet seemed to be to replace the entire assembly with one built to fit together in the first place. The choice was either Callaham/etc or... hey BKP does one don't they?!
So I took the bridge apart and carried the relevant bits to Jonathan. We did some precision measurements
* to see if the 6 screw holes on the plate in the BKP unit would marry-up with the existing screws in the guitar's body. The answer was yes, so I bought it.
I didn't realise until this morning quite how good the improvement was. The CIJ still has a meatier tone than the two Roadworns, but now it also has something approaching the top-end and general zing that they have. (Eg. You can actually hear the bass E-string acoustically across a room with the tv on now, it was there, but very flabby before).
Combine this with the re-introduction of the Sultans, and I now seem to have a perfect trio of strats:
- Roadworn 60s with ITs: Instant Rory Gallagher, probably the strat sound ingrained into me, the one I instinctively want or expect to come out when I play stuff. Woody, airy, fluid. Great for aggresive blues-rock. It's the tone I've always been reaching for for nearly 30 years.
- Roadworn 50s with Apaches: Wonderful all-round strattiness. Probably the "other strat sound" I've always dreamt/imagined but never actually owned. Much to be learnt here over the coming months. It is the sound that, when someone plays you a recording, you go "oh yeah, that's a strat" ... I've fought so long to get the other tone, I've never owned a strat that can really do this sound... I do now.
- CIJ 62 with Sultans: A meatier but mellower sort of strat. Is still out-classed when I want the extremes of what the other two offer, but she now stands on her own. I won't feel deprived anymore if this is the only one with playable strings on. And there is one area where this one shines - out of my three, this is the "rock" strat. This is the one that takes gain in a way that I like and can use. The other two survive it, and for other people might even be better at it, but for me this one sounds just peachy when I want to get a bit more raunchy than my usual "just overdriven". Eg, when I first got the Sultans (in this guitar) I said "Robin Trower". It still is, but even more expressive now that the blankets over the speakers have gone
So, all in all, a very successful weekend :D. (And a very enjoyable and fruitful trip to Feline Guitars, as usual. Many thanks Jonathan!)
* We held the two bridge plates up together to see if we could see the light through all six holes at once :lol:.