yeah i think you're overcomplicating things there dave (coming from me that might be a bit hypocritical, lol, as i do that all the time).
keep the ideas of output separate from the eq chart.
Look at the eq chart and that tells you a rough guide of the pickup's eq. A higher number means more- so a pickup with treble at 8 is brighter than a pickup with treble at 6.
Then look at the output to see how hot it is.
I kinda know what you're doing with all those xes, that if the pickup's eq curve is only relative to itself, that a curve of x, x+1 and x+2 is the same whether you make x be 3 or 7 (unless you start working it out as percentages, in which case it might be different).
But yeah.
Now you have me not knowing which way's up. Thanks :lol:
EDIT: to your edit: me too :lol: :oops:
EDIT #2: how about this.
The eq is unrelated to output. it says nothing about the pickup's output relative to other pickups- but it does say something about the pickup's EQ/frequency response compared to the other pickups. It's the ratio of bass to mids to treble, but it also gives a general idea of how bassy/middly/trebly it is compared to the other pickups in the lineup.
For example a pickup with treble of 8 will be bright, and that can be compared to the other pickups.
So, for example, using your x, x+1 and x+2 example, a pickup with BMT of 5, 6, 7 will have a similar ratio of bass to mids to treble as a pickup with a BMT of 7, 8, 9 (assuming it's not done by percentages), however, the 7,8,9 pickup will be a bit brighter.
That's my story and I'm sticking to it.