Revbrodiddley wrote:So as a progress report:
I got some new hi gains for the 360 which both measure around 12.4. I took the old ones out of course and the neck measures at 14.44 and the bridge at 6.59!! So that should solve the issue right? Wrong. Although there IS an improvement in the overall balance of tone, there is still a strange absence of girth or low-end response to the bridge pickup by itself. So with that much of a resistance difference between the old bridge pickup and the new one (old was 6.59 and new is 12.4), the sound is pretty much just as anemic. I'm thinking there HAS to be some sort of capacitor/resistor/diode/thingamuhjiggy in the signal path of the bridge pickup making it so ice picky/thin.
I've read something about 'bright caps' before...is there any chance I'm prey to a bright cap?
What you took out are almost identical to the pickups that are on my 1981 320 and 360-12 that I discussed earlier. The guitar may already have the .0047 capacitor inline from the selector switch to the bridge pickup volume pot. One thing this capacitor does is to function as a high-pass filter, cutting the lows on purpose. And because the bridge pickup is so close to the bridge, there is very little string excursion as compared to over the neck pickup, so there will be less output for that reason as well.
Double the windings does not result in double the output. The math to explain this is wider than the bandwidth of the thread.
It is my understanding that all RIC highgain pickups have the same pole spacing, not differentiated between neck and bridge. And this is after examining in detail all of them, including both button tops and new adjustible poles.