anyone know average output of vintage Mustang pickups?
Moderated By: mods
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anyone know average output of vintage Mustang pickups?
I measured my neck at 5.3k and bridge at 5.5k and was wondering if these are roughly normal for Mustang pickups of the early 70's? I notice SD Antiquities are 6.3k, and I was wondering if anyone knew what Linday Fralin or Curtis Novak outputs are for their vintage-spec Mustang pickups?
Not sure if that's normal for the vintage, but it does make me wonder if the output level was higher when the pickups were new. I'm sure someone on here knows how aging affects pickups.
As for Lindy Fralin's Mustang replacements, they have several options. The lowest output is 6k fralin mustang pickups lank
As for Lindy Fralin's Mustang replacements, they have several options. The lowest output is 6k fralin mustang pickups lank
RUN AMOK!.scandoslav wrote:i heard these are wank when it comes to metal
Yeah, pickups do lose strength over time, I'm not sure how much or if there is some clever formula.MaMo wrote:it does make me wonder if the output level was higher when the pickups were new.
I'd say that those were roughly normal for a guitar that age.glitchathon wrote:my neck at 5.3k and bridge at 5.5k
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Bill Lawrence's website wrote:Aging
Before the introduction of alnico magnets in 1935, permanent magnets were not quite that permanent. During a certain time, they lost a good amount of magnetism till they finally reached a stable condition. The process to accelerate this decay was called in the industry, "magnetic aging." In modern science, it is called "stabilizing." Since the ‘50's, we use Alnico 5 magnets which lose, under normal conditions, less then half a percent per 100 years.
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