Through a real amp, you hear the pickups but in a more pronounced way. The VHII is smooth and purrs nicely but once you dig in it gets greasy, grimey, and screams R&R. It's a warm pickup but it has the brilliance and chime of an Alnico V magnet. I'd say that it's really warm and I wouldn't want to go warmer in this guitar. At the same time, it's got more top end and clarity than the pickup it is replacing, the SD Alnico II Pro, which was simply dull and muddy sounding. There are lots of good sounds to be had with a coil tap, and I have a lot of great rock tones now covered, with a generous helping of attitude. I find the more gain you add, the more pronounced the top end bite becomes, which is not a problem.
The guitar has a gritty and lively sort of a nature, like most bolt ons do, and it is well served with the pickups I have in it now. Such a great axe, that is only outclassed severely by the pickups HAHA!!
More importantly, while the neck pickup has a deliciously different voice from the bridge pickup (Rebel Yell), I find that the bass does not become boomy and over pronounced in the neck. Furthermore, the bridge pup does not sound thin so everything balances well for switching. I have the sort of output difference I like, with the slightly hotter bridge paired with the less hot neck. I prefer more dynamic tones on the neck with more jam on the bridge, for a more saturated and focused crunch. It will take me a bit of time to 'find' all the tones with the VHII but it's going to be a fun ride!!!