Dear friends,
I'm building (kind of) strat with Warmoth parts. It will be a HS configuration with a SG custom switch (the extra pole allow to split the humbucker at the center position). Fairly bright woods: Ash body, maple neck and ebony fretboard. I added a scratch to help you to visualize.
I have played from jazz-fusion and progressive (70's) to heavy metal (80's) in the past, but nowadays I play most blues/pop-rock/rock stuff. From Zeppelin to "hairy metal", Clapton to Police and Pink Floyd of course. Can do even some AC/DC sometimes. Nothing heavier.
For the neck position (with the help of the BKP team) I choose the PAT 63's veneer boards, as it's kind of archetype strat sound, at least for me (60's pre-CBS but fatter than 50's). Will be easy to get a good blues tone from it's fatness, maybe even Gilmourish, but can sound beautiful clean too, and with volume rolled back, some Knopfler-like tones. The basic John Mayer "easy listening" sound is nice too.
So, the conundrum is the bridge humbucker!
It needs to have a good split tone when wired with the neck position single (the idea is a decent in-between strat-like tone) and work well with the neck single when changing the switch in a solo.
It needs to have good crunch tone, of course, but nice chime when clean, still not sound thin. I think a bridge humbucker needs to have punch, but in this project it will be balanced with a vintage single, so, a vintage hot output that cleans well fits the bill.
The VHii appear as the obvious choice, but, judging by youtube clips, I'm afraid of it being too "in-your-face" and screamy. I don't know if it can sound as a normal PAF with volume rolled back or still more singlecoolish.
On the other side I love the Mule sound, but have doubt it can be versatile enough. I feel the Black Dog, for example as a one-trick-poney, perfect crunch tone but too midrangey for the rest. OK I was unfair with the BD but you got the idea. :P
I must say in advance that I don't feel the Abraxas as simply a hot-roded mule just because the magnet. I fell the AIV becomes loose-sounding with the stronger wiring and the 43 wire makes difference too, as much as the magnet, as turns the highs less airy and compresses a bit. It simply don't thrills as the mule or VHii. Abraxas advances the point when versatility becomes a bad thing, IMHO.
Sorry my poor english, I'm Brazilian :)
All the best
Felipe Santos