Junior Member
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Generally speaking: Assuming you want quality , representative Strat tone and assuming you have a reasonable guitar: a seven piece or plywood bodied, fibreglass dipped, spaghetti necked cheapy has its place in our journey but do not bother putting great pups in a poor guitar because you will be disappointed. Moving on, You can eliminate stacked or side by side, humbucking Strat style p/ups as they move the tone away from accepted Strat norms. (exceptions are some high quality bridge replacements which improves the bridge tone for modern rock applications). You are then left with passives, actives and "noisless" types (REMEMBER: there are a lot of pups out there and we will have to generalise.) Actives are fine but, IMHO, tend towards a one dimentional sound - that is, they sound much the same no matter how you play or attack them or what kind of guitar you put them in. Passives are easier to deal with and any competent winder can make them happen. Bear this in mind - Fender, Duncan, Dimarzio, Fralin and company have all taken vintage Stat pups apart and replicated them. They can make them vintage, hot, bluesey etc and can do it accurately every time. Buy any of these and you will be close to where you want to go. Remember, it is only wire and magnets and the wrap method that goes into these things. Most of the major guys have this down - it is not french cooking. But, should you have a requirement for noisless technology (and there is a definite requirement about for quiet pups, be it recording, ultrea clean sound or high gain work) you are talking about real differences in the market. Firstly, all noisless technology changes the tone range and availability. Some noisless technology is so crude that major holes are punched in the tone and attack profiles. Some peripheral add ons (1 meg pots/different tone caps) are used to try and add life to dead technology (like putting band-aids on a corpse). Otherwize, Lace make some nice sounding low noise pups but appear to have fallen from favour as Fender have introduced their own 'noiseless' range - this is probably a good examaple of how a marketing decision can affect the fortunes of a reasonable quality product. Anyway, my personal recommendation for noisless is Kinmans (I particularly like the Hank Marvins that Fender used) by a long stretch. Thats all. I sell and install all types and my margins are much the same on all brands - I have no vested interest in what I sell apart from the best result for my customers. Good luck, enjoy your music and buy with your ears rather than your eyes. Regards, Russell.
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