Posted: Sun Jan 11, 2015 8:05 pm
I have a couple tele pup/JM trem setups, sounds similar but not as much bite. I'm guessing because it isn't hardtail and break angle is 75 degrees different
NOT TERRIBLY USELESS INFO, GUYYYZZZDoog wrote:MIM TELE PICKUPS MAAAAAANrobroe wrote:HEY DOOG WHAT BRIDGE PICKUP DID I PUT IN YOUR FUCKING GUITAR MAAAAAN?
BUT YOU DONT UNDERSTAND THE QUESTION MAAAAAAAAN
Bill Lawrence wrote:I see there is quite some confusion about the Tele bridge base plate. Everybody tries to explain the reason for this baseplate with only one function, but this baseplate has, in reality, 3 different functions:
A. Ferromagnetic functions,
B. Electrodynamic functions
C. All metal plates provide extra shielding.
#1 -- Only the steel baseplates corresponds to function A, B, and C.
#2 -- Brass, copper and aluminum baseplates have no ferromagnetic functions, and therefore, only correspond to function B and C.
#3. Alloys of the 300 series stainless steels have neither ferromagnetic nor electrodynamic functions and therefore, only correspond to function C.
Function A
Leo Fender used copper-plated steel baseplates on the Tele bridge pickup to stabilize and to increase the magnetic force of the relatively weaker Alnico 3 slugs. The ferromagnetic steel plate increases the inductance of the coil ( like increasing the number of turns on the coil). The steel baseplate also transmits from the steel bridge mount via the steel mounting screws some of the body vibrations into the pickup, resulting in that typical Tele twang. As a negative, this is also the cause of microphonic squealing at high volume levels.
Function B
Baseplates made of steel, copper, brass or aluminum are the cause of eddy current interference. Eddy currents shift the resonances toward the lows, resulting in a fatter, more pleasant tone, especially in the bridge position. If you don't want to increase the inductance of the coil and the magnetic force of the magnets, aluminum and brass baseplates are ideal to fine tune the tone of single coil pickups. These baseplates can be very effective on traditional single coil pickups with alnico slugs, but on many different designs, the result can be disastrous. Also, the thickness of the baseplate is very important -- if the plate is too thin, the effect is very little, but if the plate is too thick, you may end up with a muddy pickup. For excellent results, keep the thickness of the plate between 1/32" and 1/16" and make sure that the plate is firmly attached to the pickup.
Daaaaaaaang, I never knew. I've seen all of the Doogcaster's holes and guts, apart from under the bridge itself.paul_ wrote:it should be noted that MIM pickups don't have a baseplate (not even MIM vintage RIs do), use ceramic magnets, are wound hotter and brasher than pickups in the vintage alnico style, and intended for 500k pots... but the twang is there on those guitars if you need it
Does this have anything to do with the differences between Strat and Tele bridge pickups (although I'm aware the Tele bridge structure and the base plate affect that pickups performance, too)?
The coil shape isn't all that different. It's pretty similar. The big difference is that metal ashtray bridge. The bottom plate of the pickup being metal makes a very subtle difference, but that bridge, that's where you get a 15 or 20 per cent boost in volume, midrange and bass. You take that plate away and just use a Strat bridge, or put a Telecaster bridge pickup in a Strat, and it doesn't sound like a Tele.
This is a good point, I thought the same thing when I put a set in my Riviera it sounded too similar to my Tele so I went back to humbuckers... The gold foils I put in my blacktop telecaster (the red one I've been complaining about elsewhere) has made it sound far more telecaster like.benecol wrote:WRITE ME NOT POSTING THESE NUGGETS EARLIER DOWN TO MY OLD MAN MEMORY:
- - The most tele-bridge-sounding tele pickup I've ever owned was in my old (now Chris Lorez's) 69ri, which had standard MIM pickups with no baseplate.
- The second most tele-bridge-sounding pickups I've ever owned (and you need to factor in rather a lot of teles here) are the GFS Dream 90s I put in my first Tokai SG; they were shooting for P90 in humbucker format, but landed upon tele bridge.
woooh wait a second.paul_ wrote:NOT TERRIBLY USELESS INFO, GUYYYZZZDoog wrote:MIM TELE PICKUPS MAAAAAANrobroe wrote:HEY DOOG WHAT BRIDGE PICKUP DID I PUT IN YOUR FUCKING GUITAR MAAAAAN?
BUT YOU DONT UNDERSTAND THE QUESTION MAAAAAAAAN
Do it... T'is the futureDoog wrote:I've been planning to do that to my black/tort Strat for ages (minus the Bigsby, although it does look fucking cool). T'would certainly be the cheapest and most DIY-est option..dezb1 wrote:I have not done any if the things you as of, and have only come to say do this:
Cause it looks cooolmaaan
Get with the program Rob...robroe wrote:woooh wait a second.paul_ wrote:NOT TERRIBLY USELESS INFO, GUYYYZZZDoog wrote: MIM TELE PICKUPS MAAAAAAN
BUT YOU DONT UNDERSTAND THE QUESTION MAAAAAAAAN
he said He like the sound of his Doogcaster and was going for that kind of sound. I asked him twice what pickup he put in it. how in the glory hell knowing what pickup he is using useless info when trying to go after that sound?
the fuck?
robroe wrote:HELP COMPYUTAH
It sure will duuuuudeDoog wrote:Will it get me teh Kevin Carterz?
Too kind, Fran mate. When I actually start putting something together, I will come a-knocking with at least a token amount of cash in hand.
George wrote:sounds awesome. so it'll be toploaded i guess? or will you go whole hog and drill it for string through?
feeling inspired to do something similar myself with a strat body i have lying around
Always string-through, toploaders are fo suckahsGeorge wrote:sounds awesome. so it'll be toploaded i guess? or will you go whole hog and drill it for string through?
feeling inspired to do something similar myself with a strat body i have lying around