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Author Topic: Versatile SG setup - Help please  (Read 6614 times)

Dusty

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Versatile SG setup - Help please
« on: January 03, 2012, 03:30:58 AM »
First off, a brilliant 2012 to everyone!
I checked quite a couple of SG-related threads but none seemed to anwer my questions, so I hope you can help me.

My main guitar is an SG standard which I have played almost exclusively day in, day out for ten years.
It sounds unbelievably loud and sweet even unplugged,

I'm about to give this sweetie a set of BKP (and transplant the original Gibsons to an SG special), but I'm having a hard time choosing which.

My band's style can be located somewhere between Mountain, Black Sabbath and Down.
Our main tuning is just standard flat, but for some songs I drop the E-string, which gives Drop-D flat.
So while the pickups should not sound overly modern, they must be able to handle that, which not all pickups are capable of.

We use a lot of dynamics, so I'd like to use the Bridge PU for heavy riffing and aggressive solos and the neck PU for clean parts and bluesy solos.

I read here that some pickups that sound great on LPs may sound 'muddy' on SGs.
On the other hand, I am not searching for overly aggressive pickups, so from what I am reading here the Riff Raffs might not be ideal for me, and also a Mule in the Bridge position might not be right choice. I would love to get a Mississippi Queen for the neck, but I really don't want any feedback problems while playing live.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

BOTTOM LINE:
I am considering to get one of these combinations:

 BRIDGE        NECK
 BD               SM
 BD               Mule
 Abraxas       Mule

Actually, that extreme Abraxas/Mule combo seems very interesting. I don't generally use the middle position,
so why not?

Please enlighten me :harp:
« Last Edit: January 03, 2012, 03:33:03 AM by Dusty »

Alex

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Re: Versatile SG setup - Help please
« Reply #1 on: January 03, 2012, 05:31:19 AM »
The BD works great in my SG, but my guitar is a bit brighter than typical SGs, which is why usually the recommendation is for the Riffraff instead.

Although I haven't played the pickup, I would have thought the first choice would have been an Alnico Warpig in the bridge, given that it is THE Black Sabbath pickup - and surely it would fit Down as well. Add a Mississipi Queen in the neck, and you've covered the three bands you've named!
Current BKPs: Miracle Man, Nailbomb, Juggernaut, VHII
Past BKPS: Holy Diver, Trilogy Suite, Sinner, Black Dog

psalterium

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Re: Versatile SG setup - Help please
« Reply #2 on: January 03, 2012, 08:12:32 AM »
First off, a brilliant 2012 to everyone!
I checked quite a couple of SG-related threads but none seemed to anwer my questions, so I hope you can help me.

My main guitar is an SG standard which I have played almost exclusively day in, day out for ten years.
It sounds unbelievably loud and sweet even unplugged,

I'm about to give this sweetie a set of BKP (and transplant the original Gibsons to an SG special), but I'm having a hard time choosing which.

My band's style can be located somewhere between Mountain, Black Sabbath and Down.
Our main tuning is just standard flat, but for some songs I drop the E-string, which gives Drop-D flat.
So while the pickups should not sound overly modern, they must be able to handle that, which not all pickups are capable of.

We use a lot of dynamics, so I'd like to use the Bridge PU for heavy riffing and aggressive solos and the neck PU for clean parts and bluesy solos.

I read here that some pickups that sound great on LPs may sound 'muddy' on SGs.
On the other hand, I am not searching for overly aggressive pickups, so from what I am reading here the Riff Raffs might not be ideal for me, and also a Mule in the Bridge position might not be right choice. I would love to get a Mississippi Queen for the neck, but I really don't want any feedback problems while playing live.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

BOTTOM LINE:
I am considering to get one of these combinations:

 BRIDGE        NECK
 BD               SM
 BD               Mule
 Abraxas       Mule

Actually, that extreme Abraxas/Mule combo seems very interesting. I don't generally use the middle position,
so why not?

Please enlighten me :harp:

Riff Raff set: lots of versatility, vintage voiced but with a modern edge.

Dusty

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Re: Versatile SG setup - Help please
« Reply #3 on: January 03, 2012, 10:31:45 AM »
Thanks guys. I do feel even more confused now though  8)
I'm not sure if going for a pickup with such massive output and massive bass as the Warpig can work for me.
We are two guitarists in the band, and always managed to stay out of each other's frequencies.
The other guy plays mostly Les Pauls with different moderate output custom pickups.

My SG also seems to be quite bright sounding. For example, I absolutely prefer covered pickups on it, since uncovered ones tend to sound shrill in my ears...

I have no experience playing P-90 style pickups myself, let alone in a humbucker casing, so how bad can it get, feedback-wise?

Arhg, all the choices!

Philly Q

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Re: Versatile SG setup - Help please
« Reply #4 on: January 03, 2012, 01:41:46 PM »
My band's style can be located somewhere between Mountain, Black Sabbath and Down.

Not sure I can offer any useful advice, but I like your taste in music.  :D

Regarding the MQ, I don't think you need to worry about feedback, but it's a single-coil pickup so hum may be an issue if that bothers you.  However, the metal cover apparently makes them a bit less noisy than normal P-90s.

Does your SG currently have the standard 498T/490R set?  What do you like (and not like) about those pickups, for comparison?
BKPs I've Got:  RR, BKP-91, ITs, VHII, CS set, Emeralds
BKPs I Had:  RY+Abraxas, Crawlers, BD+SM

ericsabbath

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Re: Versatile SG setup - Help please
« Reply #5 on: January 03, 2012, 03:48:02 PM »
I'd say the warpig is still quite versatile for such a high dc pickup
cleans up much better than the gibson 498t pickup, specially through gain
the riff raff is definitely more versatile, a lot cleaner and brighter, but may not be the ideal for the sounds you're aiming for

if you have a JCM 800 2203 or something, you should definitely consider the alnico warpig
it is not an overly aggressive pickup at all
it's just fat and growly, but not harsh or oversaturared

the black dog is an amazing pickup as well, somewhat similar to the riff raff, but middier, much darker and not as open sounding on the mids
feels quite low output, though

the miracle man does an amazing job for 80's Sabbath, Down and some newer stuff, like Mastodon

but if you want a true classic early 70's tone, you shouldn't go over 10k (42 AWG)
also, Tim only recommends low or high output pickups for SG's
ceramics tend to sound good as well
tried the holy diver in a gibson sg, and it sucked, although it sounded amazing in every les paul I installed it
« Last Edit: January 03, 2012, 03:53:34 PM by Eric Hellstyle »
Riff Raff, Mules, Black Dog, VHII's, Cold Sweat

Alex

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Re: Versatile SG setup - Help please
« Reply #6 on: January 03, 2012, 05:33:36 PM »
^

Based on my experience with the Miracle Man (which I love!) it is exactly not what the OP wants.

If the SG is brighter I'd say go with the Black Dog - it works for me! Be sure to get some new 500Kohm pots as well, in case it starts to get muddy.

I still think though that the warpig might be a good choice, given that it cleans up nicely.
Current BKPs: Miracle Man, Nailbomb, Juggernaut, VHII
Past BKPS: Holy Diver, Trilogy Suite, Sinner, Black Dog

Dusty

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Re: Versatile SG setup - Help please
« Reply #7 on: January 03, 2012, 05:53:13 PM »
My band's style can be located somewhere between Mountain, Black Sabbath and Down.

Not sure I can offer any useful advice, but I like your taste in music.  :D

Regarding the MQ, I don't think you need to worry about feedback, but it's a single-coil pickup so hum may be an issue if that bothers you.  However, the metal cover apparently makes them a bit less noisy than normal P-90s.

Does your SG currently have the standard 498T/490R set?  What do you like (and not like) about those pickups, for comparison?

Yeah, I still have the standard PU's installed.
The pickups are not bad, and I'll continue to use them in another guitar.
What I miss in the bridge position is a little compression and "authority" for powerchords.
Generally, it's just a little icing on the 70's sound cake I want.
Pickups that match the extraordinary quality of the pure wood sound the axe delivers.

Dusty

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Re: Versatile SG setup - Help please
« Reply #8 on: January 03, 2012, 06:21:48 PM »
I use a hotrodded Fender Hotrod, a Laney GH 100(Iommi) and an Engl E-650 (Blackmore).
That and different treble boosters.

Eric:
So Tim does not recommend any pickups in the medium output range?
70's sound aside, would the Abraxis (14k) already qualify as a high output PU?

Judging from the BKP sound samples, I'm still quite interested in the Abraxas.
I do realize they are probably mounted on an LP and that doesn't say a whole lot about SG-compatibility,
but the compression and well-rounded rhythm sound are really nice.
Has anyone played that one?
« Last Edit: January 03, 2012, 06:24:40 PM by Dusty »

Philly Q

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Re: Versatile SG setup - Help please
« Reply #9 on: January 03, 2012, 07:02:34 PM »
Abraxas would count as fairly hot, output-wise (or vintage hot, tone-wise).

It's not a pickup many people on the forum seem to own - and those that do have them in LPs, I think.

Definitely not a model Tim would normally recommend for an SG.  He previously has suggested Riff Raffs, Stormy Mondays, Mules..... or at the other end of the scale, Miracle Men, Warpigs.

On the other hand, the Gibson 498T is Alnico V, around 14-15k (if I remember right).... and just about any comparable BKP (Abraxas, Emerald, Rebel Yell?) is going to give you more clarity and definition than the Gibson pickup, so maybe a medium-output BKP would work for you.  There are no rules, after all.  :wink:

Maybe this is one to discuss directly with Tim, if you can.
BKPs I've Got:  RR, BKP-91, ITs, VHII, CS set, Emeralds
BKPs I Had:  RY+Abraxas, Crawlers, BD+SM

Dusty

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Re: Versatile SG setup - Help please
« Reply #10 on: January 03, 2012, 07:21:10 PM »
Thanks for your help everyone.
It's strange how much time and money I've put into buying and modifying FX pedals and amps, but never exploring the realm of the pickup more.
I'll contact Tim now and decide on a pair.
Once I have them installed, I'll post the result here.

ViggoPower

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Re: Versatile SG setup - Help please
« Reply #11 on: January 03, 2012, 08:03:38 PM »
So can anyone explain why medium output pickups wouldn't work in a SG?
SGs are usually a bit brighter than LPs. What's the problem?

Philly Q

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Re: Versatile SG setup - Help please
« Reply #12 on: January 03, 2012, 09:01:34 PM »
I think it's because SGs are all mahogany, which tends to emphasise bass frequencies, whereas in an LP - despite the extra mass - you have a balanced tone due to the combination of the maple top and mahogany back.

Here's a very old quote from Tim Mills:

Quote
I always recommend trying to keep the output low on SG's as medium output pickups mud out with all that mahogany, hence my Riff Raff suggestion.A high gainer like a Warpig sounds good and so does a Miracle Man as both have more than enough power to really drive through timber.Funnily enough I fitted a Stormy Monday to a friends SG and that sounded really nice too......quite a surprise but it chunked up really well into an overdriven Marshall.
The ones to avoid are the medium output humbuckers as they simply seem to add to the bottom end of the mahogany.So I wouldn't bother with VHII,Emerald, Crawler or even a Nailbomb as that's got a big bass response too even though it's quite high gain.
I wouldn't totally dismiss it but my experience of SG's is the bottom end blooms up quite a bit with certain pickups and the Nailbomb has a lot of bottom and mid range both inherent in an SG.Some SGs will take a Nailbomb perfectly well if they're very bright but on the whole I've found that sub DC8.5K humbuckers sound fantastic,Alnico V powered humbuckers in particular the closer you get to DC8.5K so in this instance if a customer wanted a Mule I'd go with AV over AIV.A Stormy Monday, because the wind is lower and the tone more open, sounds great with AIV.
At the other end of the scale, the high gainers like Miracle Man which is ceramic powered work well as the magnet controls the bass response or Warpig are excellent.Both of these are wound with a very fine gauge wire which keeps the coil size small.........the smaller coil footprint under the strings keeps the tone more focused.
Well there you go.........all I can add is that if you buy one and it's not right, I will of course swap it.
BKPs I've Got:  RR, BKP-91, ITs, VHII, CS set, Emeralds
BKPs I Had:  RY+Abraxas, Crawlers, BD+SM

ericsabbath

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Re: Versatile SG setup - Help please
« Reply #13 on: January 04, 2012, 12:27:23 AM »
So can anyone explain why medium output pickups wouldn't work in a SG?
SGs are usually a bit brighter than LPs. What's the problem?

I  had a few gibson SG's, epiphone G400's and a 70's brazilian giannini sg
none of them were brighter than any maple top les paul I had or played
they were just thinner and sharper sounding, more center mid based, but definitely not brighter
Riff Raff, Mules, Black Dog, VHII's, Cold Sweat

pakoA25

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Re: Versatile SG setup - Help please
« Reply #14 on: January 04, 2012, 04:41:21 PM »
I ordered Black Dog for de bridge & Mule for the neck. From BKP's says to me they are a good versatile combo wich i'll have a complete paddle of sounds.