Hey guys,
as some of you may know fellow forum member Slartibartfast was selling his Jackson equipped with a Miracle Man - Sinner Set and although I initially wanted to buy the guitar off of him, it ended up with a different result: I got the pickups :P
Those just arrived yesterday in my mail and I had to work all day, so I as soon as I got home I fired up the soldering iron and put them in. After playing them before going to sleep and after I woken up my first impressions are the following:
The Miracle Man has an odd voicing. Not in a bad way, I just never heard it in a pickup before as all the models I played so far no matter by what brand where quite midfocused. This thing lives in the low mids and bass and screams like a mofo in the highs. It's the very first pickup that actually managed to fatten up my Strat, even the Holydiver sounded thin in it. I was at first concerned that the highs would be OTT but playing with the EQ and my Tubescreamer and Amp helps quite a lot. Great pinch harmonics. And just a notch more modern than the HD, so it's not in the modern metal Painkiller territory (and is nowhere near the output of the PK) but gives you that extra push you sometimes want from the HD. Old School Thrash and Death. Can't wait to play it through a proper half stack :D
The Sinners are actually both bridge models fitted with baseplates, specifically wound to work with the MM so they don't lose the any volume when you switch between positions. And that's very obvious, because I never heard any Single Coil react like this before. Both sound almost as fat as a Humbucker, have loads of bass and saturate very well. I never actually sweeped on a Neck Singlecoil before without feeling that it would lack output. Well the Sinner Neck works great for this!
As far as the Middle position goes, I prefer the Neck over it, but it helps in the 4th position (or 2nd?) when you combine it with the Neck for the Strat quack which isn't as modern as you would expect with a rolled back volume. Great!
Now to the negative things: I don't like the position that combines the Middle SN with the MM. Waaay to bright and annoying. But that's the overall problem I seem to have with this guitar: there is something that makes it sound too biting and thin at times and I'm sure it has something to do with the bridge. I swapped pickups around in it many times and the last thing I could try is to put a Warpig in it, but I know that won't solve the problem. I'm happy now the MM fattens it up but I feel I could get more body out of it.
The bridge is a vintage style tremolo I don't use, so the springs are tightened to the point where nothing moves. I've been thinking about different saddles, a brass block and a Tremol-No, just anything that gives you more depth and "oomph". Any ideas what can help? I know Toe-Knee has experimented with stuff like this. Any ideas would be appreciated :)
Anyhow, this isn't supposed to be a review, just my thoughts on the first impression. I will write a full report as soon as I had enough time to play around with those babies, but for now I'm happy!
Cheers