rickaddict wrote:dcr wrote:
I guess part of the problem was that, try as I might, I just could not warm up to that neck pickup. It is very dark & kind of hollow sounding, to my ears. It would be nice to be able to dial it back a bit without just shutting it off altogether.
Maybe we just need to do what I've done with my Glenn Frey bass--adjust the height of the neck pickup down relative to the bridge pickup until we get the optimal blend.
I did that with my 4003 MG right away and it made a WORLD of difference once I had "matched" them. I know some people are big into "this pickup does this and this pickup does that" but I like mine to be fairly similar in output. That lets me focus on other differences like frequency response due to position, and attenuate those things various different ways with independent controls per pickup.
cheyenne wrote:As far as pickup placement being the cause, my '02 CII had the other pickup placement, and to my ears sounded pretty much the same.
Wow, really? I would have thought pushing the neck pickup further "south" would have made a world of difference. In fact I think a 4004 with J Bass/4002ish pickup routs would be neato.
I think a pickup like the HB1 (since we're talking 4004 tone) would really benefit (in the minds of people like me) from something like Audere's Z-Switching module so you could play around with the tone a LOT. I like that dark 'bucker sound sometimes but it's not always what I'm after. In fact, a "4006" (4002 with HB1s) would be a perfect candidate for the Audere pre because it would be reminiscent of the original variable impedance design. That said you could also just do coil taps and series/parallel switching if you just wanted to get away from stock, parallel 'bucker sound sometimes.
dcr wrote:In the end, though, the design needs to sound right, not just look right.
I definitely agree, DCR, but unfortunately I've never played a 4004 to know how I feel about their sound. If for some reason I had to choose as a builder which to favor--even though I don't believe you really ever have to make this decision--I would favor sound over look. Something built to be high in utility and function and a pleasurable tool for the artisan will NATURALLY start to look good...