beatlefreak wrote:I believe the Hi-gains have always been around 11-12kΩ. Keep in mind tha many people try to measure the DC resistance (improperly called impedance) at the output jack with the pickup still incircuit. This will many times give a false reading, due to series (volume control) or parallel (the second pickup) affecting the reading. The pickup must be measured with at least one lead disconnected from the circuit. Or, at the very least, the pickguard must be removed, and the measurement taken at the pickup leads, with the selector switch set to the pickup not being measured (this takes the pickup effectively out of the circuit).
I don't have any experience with 60's Rics, but the 70's into the early 80's hi-gains were definitly weaker than today's stuff. I had a '73 4001 with original pickups, and the neck hi-gain was around 8.5k at the pickup itself. I have a 1989 hi-gain sitting here that is 9.05k. The bridge hi-gain off my 4001 went bad before I measured it, and TV Jones rewound it for me to around 9.5 (sounded fantastic btw, I'd still have it except the buyer of the bass insisted I include that pickup). OTOH the hi-gains on my 360 BBR are around 12k, and for me, thats too muddy in the neck position but sounds great in the bridge. For a bass, i like the weaker hi-gains in the 1/2 inch spacing and the stronger ones in the 1 inch spacing.
Greg