Oh I perfectly get all these points. But as it's been said and part of my point was, those high gain pups aren't based on PAFs. So why make them painstakingly vintage specs?
I'm not sure the specs of the high gain pups are so much "painstakingly vintage" as they are of painstakingly high quality. The point is that Tim & Co. have done a lot of work to find out how to build the pups with the tone they want, and that means getting the right components for the tone they want. I don't think there's any desire by BKP to make an expensive pickup just for the hell of it! I mean, that would just be
silly ....
Ultimately, BKP make pups that they think will give the best tone, which means getting components that meet their standards, scatter-winding by hand, etc.. This sort of thing is not necessarily cheap, but then the goal isn't to build a cheap pickup, it's to build a great pickup. We, the consuming public, then have a choice about whether or not we agree with BKP about how great their pickups are. :)
The kids who'll want those pickups won't really care about that. I can see why a lot of people would and it's obvious that this is part of their sound, but there is a huge share of the market that won't really care.
I dunno if the "vintage specs" are really a big deal to the majority of BKP customers. At least, I can't say
I ever thought about it. Their web site talk a great deal about the care given to each part of the manufacturing process, and specifically notes how components differ depending on the type of pickup, but doesn't really seem to dwell on "vintage specs". Except for the pickups that specifically aim to reproduce tonality from within the range of actual "vintage pickups", the vintage spec thing doesn't seem like a big deal.
But the
quality thing is surely the biggest deal. And so the question becomes: Which components can we start to cheapen without sacrificing quality? And I don't know, 'cause I know relatively little about making pickups ....
But hey, if one wanted to figure that out, then at least pickup winding is not rocket science. Anyone -- any kid, even -- can go out and find the info you need on the Internet or in books and then hunt down the materials to assemble and wind their own pickups. Then we can use components as cheap or as expensive as we like! For my part, though, I decided that route would ultimately cost me more than simply buying a set of BKPs .... ;)
And if we just want massed produced pickups made from cheap components, well, lots of DiMarzio's only run about USD 60! :lol: