Hi everyone, so I think I've effectively chewed Ben's ear off on this topic so I'm going to pester some other people (all of you) about it.
Here's the deal. Since I find the RY neck a bit boomy and the RY bridge a bit thin in my Gibson Les Paul, I'm going to put a Nailbomb in the bridge and probably a Black Dog in the neck. This should give me a more balanced and interchangeable EQ for my specific needs.
The Godin LG is a solid lump of mahogany with a 24 fret 24 3/4 inch thin profile bolt on neck and a rosewood fingerboard. It has a SD Alnico II Pro in the neck and a Custom Custom in the bridge, a combination that works well and sounds good in the guitar.
BUT, I will be tragically left with a set of BKPs without a piece of wood. This cannot be!
So I've been pestering Ben to try and determine if the pickups will take to the guitar or not. See, it is a wood mounting guitar so I'd have to drill out the pickup holes to mount them in the guitar. This probably would create resale problems if I did not like them, hence the hesitation.
So...
As I described things in my email:
Tonight I played both guitars unplugged. Acoustically, the Les Paul sounds brighter with the maple cap, weight relieved mahogany body. The Les Paul Standard has open, clear, controlled, and focused lows, a very present and singing midrange / upper mids, as well as singing but also tapered highs.
The Godin LG has a rounder, phatter, and thicker bottom with a more scooped / low mid focused midrange and present but darker and tapered highs. The bottom and top are more present than the mids giving it a wider and meatier tone than the Les Paul. The Les Paul has this singing quality while the LG is more muffled.
So, as I understand it, both the Custom Custom and the Rebel Yell are mid focused pickups but the Rebel Yell really focuses on upper mids, similar to a JB, while the Custom Custom is centre mid focused like a Crawler Bridge PUP. Is this correct?
Turns out I mixed the samples up and the Custom Custom had the brighter crunch tone and the JB had the darker and more mid focused crunch tone.
JB
http://cdn.seymourduncan.com/sounds/9fb3a435796a54d8cc6dccdfad86a0d2403394f7.mp3Custom Custom
http://cdn.seymourduncan.com/sounds/e0ec3929a8c432fa708fbadef3d8cfadcdaee265.mp3I believe these were samples with a Les Paul / JCM800. Not sure on the mic.
Rebel Yell
https://bareknucklepickups.co.uk/main/pickups.php?cat=humbuckers&sub=contemporary&pickup=rebel_yellThe Rebel Yell has an EQ of
B/M/T 5 7 7 and the Custom Custom has an EQ of B/M/T 3 7 7 according to SD's website. Yet, a Rebel Yell is recommended for dark guitars (Which the LG most definitely is) and the Custom Custom is recommended for bright guitars (Which the LG is most definitely not).
Ben confirmed that the EQ of both pickups are similar (Although the tone is different), regardless of their recommended applications.
I believe the LG had a Custom 5 bridge with a Jazz II stock and the Jazz II sounded thin / scooped while the Custom 5 was muddy with marshalls but worked better with Mesas. I originally swapped them out for a set of Alnico II pros (Sounded good) and then swapped the bridge for a HFS (A disaster) and then for a Custom Custom which didn't take to the Dual Rectifier well but loves the Mesa Boogie Electra Dyne and most marshalls.
Phew, that's a LOT of text.
On paper, it sounds like the Rebel Yells should take fine. BUT, I had a bad experience with this guitar.
I put a PRS HFS in the bridge to get the wide, hairy, and massive sound of a Singlecut in that guitar and it did not take. It sounded far too scooped with a surprisingly low amount of output and a weird spike in the treble that the PRS Singlecut did not have. Playing both guitars back to back, I think the Singlecut was darker but as I recall, it was solid mahogany with a set neck on it.
I don't want to end up with a similar experience with the Rebel Yells but the HFS has a ceramic magnet (Which has a sharper treble and a tighter bottom than an alnico V, right?) and the Rebel Yells are mid boost pickups which seem to work best in that Godin LG.
Ben confirmed that a ceramic magnet yields a more scooped and treble / bass heavy tone which was the problem with the HFS.
It sounds like a Rebel Yell would sound clearer than a Custom Custom with a more open and complex tone and a faster tracking bass. All of these things are not problems. It also would most likely not sound thin. A Jazz II sounded thin in the neck of the Godin LG so I am not worried with how the Rebel Yell neck would work in this guitar.