jps wrote:
Yeah. Sell the hi-gains and put toasters in the guitar.

I have toasters in my 360 and love them. But I want a different sound out of this guitar. Also, i'm sorry, but toasters are insanely overpriced these days. They're literally twice as much as they were when I bought them for my 360. They're great pickups, and the quintessential Ric sound in many ways, but the cost is just way too high. I have plenty of other guitars that sound great without needing crazy expensive pickups.
Ric5150 wrote:
What he said.
If the hi-gains are "too hot" for you, you probably aren't going for a distorted sound very often. The toasters do clean chime better and hold up pretty well into overdrive with a little 'crunch'. You may very well like the toasters better.
It's actually not that they're too hot. Trust me, the neck pickup is literally unusable. I have it backed off as far as I can without stripping the wood, I have a bleed cap on the volume pot, and it's still so muddy and bass heavy that it's literally unusable with any amp at any setting. I've never heard anything like it. And being a single coil at 15.7K in the neck position, it doesn't surprise me that it sounds terrible.
iiipopes wrote:I did it. I unwound a 14-15kohm high gain down to @ 7.5 - 8 kohms. This was before scatterwounds or the newer high gains with adjustable pole pieces were readily available. I only did it because I have almost 40 years of tinkering with electric instruments, and I knew the risks of dealing with 44AWG wire, finer than a human hair.
It took a couple of hours. You need to stop and check with your ohmmeter every so often to make sure you aren't unwinding too much. I wanted ultimate jangle out of my 1981 360-12WB FG ckbd, so I went all the way down to 7.5 - 8 kohms. I got lucky: since I have a 24-fret guitar, the neck pickup takes on some acoustic-y qualities with the right settings, since it is closer to where an acoustic guitar soundhole would be.
For your solid body 6-string, I wouldn't go below 10kohms.
The bar magnet is composite and extremely brittle. It could break if you aren't extremely careful.
Finally, the new high-gains with the adjustable poles, I believe, also have @ 10kohms' worth of wire on them. They have clarity and definition, but still have body and drive. I would suggest a pair of the new high gains would be a safer, albeit more expensive option to get the tones you are looking for.
Excellent info, thanks! I'm willing to take the risk. The pickup (as I mentioned above) is so muddy that is unusable. I really have nothing to loose. I figure i'll try my luck with the neck, and if things go well, I can take some off the bridge to balance them better. I was thinking around 10K or so...so thanks for the insight on that.
If worse comes to worse and I junk them, i'll buy another set of high gains that aren't so overwound. I'd never want to sell this neck pickup to anyone. It's that bad. Anyways, thanks again.
-Nick