WORLDS HOTTEST PICKUP

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 4 лют 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1 тис.

  • @MilitantOldLady
    @MilitantOldLady 2 роки тому +1024

    So it’s a Boss Metal Zone in pickup form 😅

    • @xaviergough9359
      @xaviergough9359 2 роки тому +114

      Now, imagine that slamming through an actual Metal Zone.

    • @jungyoon5010
      @jungyoon5010 2 роки тому +3

      I like how he blends in with the background wall, with that jacket

    • @fivemagics18
      @fivemagics18 2 роки тому +2

      @@CharlieMoney777 ?

    • @wariat71
      @wariat71 2 роки тому

      @@TheLowestLow Nah he just chose to be a dick. Also he doesn't know what fun is. I'd be super stoked to see how this monstrosity sounds live on a huge rack with a metal zone xd

    • @andrewmanthey6005
      @andrewmanthey6005 2 роки тому +18

      @@Galalyth bro started hating right off the bat 😭

  • @LordKlektar
    @LordKlektar 2 роки тому +274

    It’s so hot it picks up the notes you think about playing

    • @Tonks143
      @Tonks143 Рік тому +3

      more like its so hot you can't hear the detail man

    • @tubebobwil
      @tubebobwil Рік тому +3

      🤩

    • @joeydurant6267
      @joeydurant6267 7 місяців тому

      I wanna see it pulling the strings to it... Like can you go out of tune cuz the pull of the magnet?

    • @TeijeWijnterp
      @TeijeWijnterp 6 місяців тому

      Like a delay pedal that has negative delay time?

    • @TeijeWijnterp
      @TeijeWijnterp 6 місяців тому +1

      ​@@Tonks143Great! So I can play sloppy

  • @nicholaspossinger7993
    @nicholaspossinger7993 2 роки тому +262

    That very first "clean" setting on the 54k sounded amazing!

    • @SxSxG666
      @SxSxG666 2 роки тому +6

      No

    • @rx-heaven8934
      @rx-heaven8934 Рік тому +28

      Really? All I'm hearing is mud.

    • @MoonshineSazerac
      @MoonshineSazerac Рік тому

      It sounded objectively fucking awful, what's wrong with you.

    • @Robyn_iz_Here
      @Robyn_iz_Here Рік тому +7

      ​@@rx-heaven8934 yeah cuase he's playing distorted open chords. It's gonna sound muddy. Hit it with some power chords or single string riffs it'd sound great

    • @skxj
      @skxj Рік тому +3

      @@rx-heaven8934 likely that tiny terror causing the mud.

  • @creativeheadroom
    @creativeheadroom 2 роки тому +34

    There are three things I would love to hear with this pickup:
    - Coil split. If it's this hot as a humbucker, what happens if you only have one coil left? Single coils tend to be brighter than humbuckers, so that might actually solve the resistance issue.
    - Does it clean up if you roll down the volume? How far can you take this? Is the tone useful in this scenario?
    - Treble cap to boost highs. A bit of extra brightness wouldn't hurt, so perhaps a capacitor could help with this.
    Overall, I think this sounded better than I had expected. Yes, it sounds compressed. However, I think it sounded more barky and dynamic than boosting an amp with a Tube Screamer. There is more experimentation to be done. I hope you'll consider making a follow-up video.

    • @thedavesofourlives1
      @thedavesofourlives1 5 місяців тому

      likely the increased capacitance from huge windings will effect the tone, unless it was scatter wound

  • @JimboLodisC
    @JimboLodisC 2 роки тому +124

    I almost bought a Seymour Duncan Slug (48k DCR) but went with a more "normal" Jupiter rail pickup instead. 54k is even more insane!

    • @JimboLodisC
      @JimboLodisC 2 роки тому

      @Skratch Rapture it's nasty and I love it haha

    • @Insanicide13
      @Insanicide13 2 роки тому +2

      I've wanted to check the Slug out for so long. I just fear of it being way muddy

    • @mrjoe9308
      @mrjoe9308 2 роки тому +1

      today lots of pickups maker have passive pickups with 20/24/26 k ohms . Such as lace pickups , bareknuckle , bulldog pickups ... but 54K looks insane for me .

    • @Metalbaum
      @Metalbaum 2 роки тому +3

      The slug is amazing, i play it in a baritone and it slays

    • @CrossPain11
      @CrossPain11 2 роки тому +3

      I’ve got the Slug in my custom baritone and it absolutely slays. I was really unsure if I made the right choice initially, but after spending about two years with it now I am sold and would absolutely put it in another guitar.

  • @masonrydin5369
    @masonrydin5369 2 роки тому +203

    Honestly I would love more videos like this. Your reviews always seem better than others in my opinion

    • @napesdrk1174
      @napesdrk1174 2 роки тому +1

      Have you had the pleasure of viewing Mr. Glenn Fricker?? He's my number 1. Science driven experiments and no BS. KDH is solid as well but, He's more of a guitar player who dabbles in "equipment reviews"

    • @middaymeds
      @middaymeds 2 роки тому +12

      @@napesdrk1174 lol glenn is a hotheaded troll who disguised paid promotion as reviews for years until he got called out

    • @napesdrk1174
      @napesdrk1174 2 роки тому +2

      @@middaymeds yo bro, I felt the same way when I first gave him a try. I needed a break before I fell for him. That Troll behavior you speak about is just humor. Don't be so easily offended son. You limit yourself.

    • @selenemoon2249
      @selenemoon2249 2 роки тому +8

      @@napesdrk1174 You mean the guy who trashed a microphone because he used it backwards and then complained how it sounds? Or is it that guy who complains how everything sounds the same these days, but insists using the same amps and distressor on every record, because people need to have their own sound but when they do, he doesn't like it and would rather use a 5150 because that amp really has a unique sound?

    • @russellzauner
      @russellzauner 2 роки тому +2

      @@napesdrk1174
      *INTERNET PSA*
      I learned a long time ago not to recommend someone from another channel on someone's channel unless someone did it first and even then it's still a dicey conversation to start.
      Fanboying/gushing about it on someone else's channel is just bad form; assured to get you at the least derision if anyone responds in the first place. But as someone finally told me a long time ago, no one is going to *tell* you but they'll be glad to *teach* you.
      You see what happened there? I thought it was a teachable moment; I hope you found it a learnable one.

  • @joshuabarron8535
    @joshuabarron8535 2 роки тому +102

    That's an insane amount of output.

    • @russellzauner
      @russellzauner 2 роки тому +4

      *chevy chase "I LIKE IT" face dot jpeg*

    • @DMSProduktions
      @DMSProduktions 2 роки тому +3

      @@russellzauner O/T SPAM!

    • @Traumglanz
      @Traumglanz 2 роки тому +1

      But it certainly sounds like they could have / should have used a wire with less resistance, while keeping it just as overwound.

    • @DMSProduktions
      @DMSProduktions 2 роки тому +3

      @@Traumglanz LOL! Talk about oxymoron!

  • @neuroscope9052
    @neuroscope9052 2 роки тому +47

    Having the option for such insanity is cool. I'd be interested to hear it through amps known for their clean tones and less prone to breakup.

  • @ellenrugowski6255
    @ellenrugowski6255 2 роки тому +22

    Just an F.Y.I. - while DC resistance for a pickup can help indicate more signal level/output (more DC resistance means more windings of wire for the pickup, which means more of a magnetic field, for the string to pass though, inducting more electrical voltage/signal through the pickup coils). I have a bit of an electronics background (I guess it's why I did most of the electronics related tech stuff for the bands I played in), and would like to point out that there are other factors in pickup output such as pickup magnet strength (though if the magnets are too strong, they will have a tendency to pull on the strings too much, killing string vibration, and in some cases, pull the string out of tune), and pickup height/closeness to the strings. Also, DC resistance can be higher, just because of the wire size of the coils being small (smaller wire typically has a higher electrical resistance). As much of a pain as it is, the only real way to tell what a pickup's output is, to measure the voltage, when a string is plucked, with an oscilloscope, or a voltmeter (preferably an AC voltmeter).
    I'm not surprised that you noticed a loss of high end for the pickup. With as many windings as it has to give it a 54 kilo-ohms DC resistance, it has very high inductance. The higher the inductance, the more, that higher frequencies are impeded/blocked. It's a tradeoff for mega output pickups. You either go the active route (relatively few windings to preserve the high end, and an internal pre-amp to boost the pickup signal), or wind the living daylights out of a passive pickup, and put up with it being darker sounding.

    • @aaronstonebeat
      @aaronstonebeat Рік тому +1

      Excellent points! I wanted to make them but there is no need.
      One thing maybe: it's easy and cheap to measure the inductance (devices cost about the same as multimeters); it would be interesting to know that.

    • @dsmhiggins67
      @dsmhiggins67 Рік тому +2

      Bang on. As an electronic and electrical engineer as soon as resistance of the pickup was equated to “power output” my spidey sense tingled. Great that you gave this run down !

    • @thedavesofourlives1
      @thedavesofourlives1 5 місяців тому

      if it was wound by machine rather than scatter wound, it would have increased capacitance also, similar effect as putting a tone cap across the output.

  • @moonboogien8908
    @moonboogien8908 2 роки тому +99

    That pinch harmonic around 8:10 had me rolling, wow 👍🤣

    • @charleshumbles6285
      @charleshumbles6285 2 роки тому +2

      Lol, I was hoping it was meant to be a joke. But he has this very shrill vibrato that is way too fast and never in time. There is no feel, some people see others use vibrato and think “oh so I just arbitrarily wiggle the string so fast the listener needs to pop a Dramamine, regardless of the tempo of the song, vibe etc”.

    • @hydorah
      @hydorah 2 роки тому +10

      Pinch harmonics always will be shrill and you don't have a lot of time for gentle, wide oscillations with this technique, it's not just vibrato, you catch a string with the pick and say, part of the thumb to make a squeal, which you can then do stuff with. It's a staple '80s metal feature and the only way Zakk Wylde can play anything. I think this guy has particularly good pinch harmonic chops

    • @calebhohneke8482
      @calebhohneke8482 2 роки тому +2

      I lost it at that pinch too lol. That pickup is so hot that the compression of it almost makes it sound like a beast trapped in a cage....But that pinch gives ya an idea of how truly hot this pickup is.😈

    • @RichardGarcia93
      @RichardGarcia93 Рік тому

      @@charleshumbles6285well said. I agree.

    • @littlehendrix3
      @littlehendrix3 Рік тому

      @@hydorah I was speaking of his vibrato in general from what I've seen on his videos. Not pinch harmonics exclusively.

  • @Heivang
    @Heivang 2 роки тому +128

    I'd love to hear this in a bass.

    • @RolandDeschain1
      @RolandDeschain1 2 роки тому +21

      Talk about hitting the 'brown note'... 😂

    • @xdoctorblindx
      @xdoctorblindx 2 роки тому +13

      The cab's speakers wouldn't love it...

    • @riogrande163
      @riogrande163 2 роки тому +10

      similar thing happened with Gibson basses, the 60's EB- basses had a massive sidewinder humbucker, 30k ohms!

    • @xStabizorz
      @xStabizorz 2 роки тому +3

      The sidewinders have very weak magnets tho so the output is not as ridiculous as the DCR would suggest

    • @bobbyblair6862
      @bobbyblair6862 2 роки тому +1

      @@xdoctorblindx what does that have to do with anything? My speakers don't care what pickup I'm using.

  • @the_bramble
    @the_bramble 2 роки тому +101

    If this is supposed to be a heavier version of the Slug, then they should have called it 'The Snail' - BIG missed opportunity here. Guess you could say they were a little /slow/ to the pun.

    • @hogie1259
      @hogie1259 2 роки тому

      Looks exactly like the Seymour Duncan Slug. Same magnets and about 6kohm higher than the slug but Seymour was first with the stupidly high output pickup. The slug also has highs and definition.

    • @waitin4winter
      @waitin4winter 2 роки тому +1

      I hope you’re not a comedian

    • @j_freed
      @j_freed 2 роки тому

      @@waitin4winter no, if he were a comedian, he’s be banned on all Woke college campuses for fat-shaming snails (who we all know are a marginalized identity group and victims of systemic hate and violence.)

  • @semyaza555
    @semyaza555 2 роки тому +5

    Clicked on this video expecting a sexy pickup…and I wasn’t disappointed.

  • @nessearthbound3107
    @nessearthbound3107 2 роки тому +47

    That sounds super grungy, I love it! Could be great for some sludge/stoner stuff. I wanna put this in a Mustang lol

    • @caiusmadison2996
      @caiusmadison2996 2 роки тому +11

      The tone we all like, about a Mustang, is the actual cheap Mustang pickup. It's a Stratocaster pickup, with pole pieces level to the top of the bobbin. That's the sound. The hamburgers where used live to be louder and noisier, but in general, a straight lace Stang was a common item for recording, so much so the Pumpkins only used them for clean in studio, during Siamese Dream. You'll lose that beautiful clean tone, doing buckers in anything. It's becomes a different, much less defined sound, antithetical to a Mustang. However, everyone thinks Cobain put buckers in em and so that's the end. Ask Butch Vig, how it was recorded. Zero Humbuckers, you aren't hearing, what you assume you are.

    • @nessearthbound3107
      @nessearthbound3107 2 роки тому +4

      @@caiusmadison2996 oh yea you are right and I know Cobain used single coils, but I just like the shape of the Mustang lol, it would be funny to put this in one. Not looking for or expecting the classic Stang tone, even tho it’s really nice for sure

    • @aniquinstark4347
      @aniquinstark4347 2 роки тому +6

      @@caiusmadison2996 >hamburgers

    • @derekwright5564
      @derekwright5564 Рік тому +1

      I bought one, when it gets here. It is going into a custom strat I built. It has a Fender '64 tele pickup in the bridge, a Fender 57/62 strat in the neck. This will be going into the middle position. It has a 24 inch scale length. I am looking forward to see what it sounds like. If you meant putting it into a "mustang" like the horse thingy well then I can't help on that.

  • @erlikquadros5873
    @erlikquadros5873 2 роки тому +28

    54kOhm is INSANE! But high coil resistance don't necessarily mean high output, it depends on magnet strength as well, so you can have a low resistance high output pickup with really strong magnets, and they sound really cool.

    • @TaterMater22
      @TaterMater22 2 роки тому +3

      The phrasing "high output" when referring specifically to high resistance (Ohms) is confusing to me... The higher resistance refers to the coil's resistance to the flow of electricity, so how could this result in a higher output to the amp?

    • @khoroshev33
      @khoroshev33 Рік тому

      @@TaterMater22 think of it as a rail gun, but in reverse (sorry for my bad English)

    • @tktspeed1433
      @tktspeed1433 Рік тому

      @@TaterMater22 means there is more wire for the string to create eddy currents into (I think, not quite sure).

    • @GCKelloch
      @GCKelloch Рік тому

      @@TaterMater22 It generally means more winds. More winds increases signal strength and inductance to the point of diminishing return i.e. wire far from the magnetized string portion doesn't contribute much to output. Typical Fender SC pickups are actually pretty inefficient in the respect. The bottom half (or so) of the coil doesn't add much. The most efficient pickup coil cross section would be ~1/8" square. Thinner (higher gauge) wire has higher resistance, but thinner wire coils are denser, and can be situated closer to the strongest magnetic section of the string, so the slight loss of output from the increased resistance can be offset by the increased coil efficiency.

    • @johnmclaughlin2392
      @johnmclaughlin2392 Рік тому

      @@TaterMater22I am also confused. I thought a lower output impedance would result in more signal to the load/amp input.

  • @mateuszliszewski
    @mateuszliszewski 2 роки тому +8

    You've just proven Glenn Fricker wrong in this video, by proving that pickups not only affect the output but also DO affect the tone (still not as much as a speaker of mic ofc).

    • @f2detaboada
      @f2detaboada 6 місяців тому +1

      Well, tbf Glenn said that more distortion makes the sublte differences of tone irrelevant, and he wasn't wrong about that.

  • @jaketheripper7385
    @jaketheripper7385 Рік тому +7

    DC Resistance is by no means an indication of "output". This is a widely misunderstood misconception that's perpetuated throughout the industry, and it's been said that it continues to be believed and repeated because it supports a narrative that suits the manufacturers and helps them sell pickups. In any case it is indeed a myth... It could be argued that there is perhaps a *correlation* between DC resistance and output at least in some circumstances, however the situation has become so muddled that the two terms are used interchangeably and in such a context that implies they mean the same thing which they most certainly do not.

  • @Techiastronamo
    @Techiastronamo 2 роки тому +3

    That clean sound blows my mind, wow

  • @risenfromyoutubesashesagai6302

    Aside from having such a significant difference in power, I think it looks much cooler in that purple guitar as well.

  • @Onemoretake01
    @Onemoretake01 Рік тому +1

    I always like how direct and observant your conclusions are. I don't even always agree with you, but I really like your honesty and fairness. Good channel bro

  • @hoonaignachowaneha
    @hoonaignachowaneha 2 роки тому +7

    I don't really follow any guitar-tube channels but I am always excited for new KDH!

  • @DMSProduktions
    @DMSProduktions 2 роки тому +40

    The HOTTER you get, usually the darker the pick up! That much circuit resistance will shift the resonant peak downwards!

    • @arthurreid6108
      @arthurreid6108 2 роки тому +5

      Only Bill Lawrence figured out how to get big output with a bright tone. Sadly, it's very easy to make them sound like a box of bees and if you run them you kinda gotta move everything over to them or you'll be spending more time tweaking your amp than playing.

    • @mrljgibson
      @mrljgibson 2 роки тому +4

      @@arthurreid6108 so you are saying I shouldn't play a box of bees? Weird...

    • @johnwetzel6200
      @johnwetzel6200 2 роки тому +3

      Well, inductance and capacitance. But still generally right.

    • @craigharrison5406
      @craigharrison5406 2 роки тому

      @@arthurreid6108 Dimarzio X2N is a very high output and it sounds really bright.

    • @arthurreid6108
      @arthurreid6108 2 роки тому +2

      @@craigharrison5406 I have the X2N in 4 guitars, it's my pickup of choice, but I'm not sure I'd call it a bright pickup. It's a very well balanced pickup, which sounds bright compared to almost anything else at that output level (except Bill Lawrence stuff). But the BL stuff is actually bright, brighter than PAF bright.

  • @lets-allplay
    @lets-allplay 2 роки тому +137

    Would be interesting to hear how that pickup would sound with different pots, 250k 500k 1meg ect.

    • @Drewidx-yz7cv
      @Drewidx-yz7cv 2 роки тому +7

      Yeah I'd love to see this! Your reviews are top notch!

    • @psykoklown874
      @psykoklown874 2 роки тому +29

      Probably needs a 1 meg pot just to regain some of the highs.

    • @coalfacechris1336
      @coalfacechris1336 2 роки тому +7

      @@psykoklown874 Or even a bright cap across the pot.

    • @ushnicyuvnikof2748
      @ushnicyuvnikof2748 2 роки тому +8

      It won't make any difference this hot.

    • @masterofreality230
      @masterofreality230 2 роки тому

      Yea, would you need a really high mf cap to do anything to the tone? idk lol

  • @StephGV2
    @StephGV2 2 роки тому +7

    Wire it with a parallel switch and you get a 13.5K brighter sounding option. Like a bright sounding DM Superhumbucker. Parallel shifts the bandwidth back up again.

  • @craigharrison5406
    @craigharrison5406 2 роки тому +11

    I always found the voicing of a pickup to be more important than the output. Granted you don't want to be running vintage pickups for death metal but I've found some of the best sounding metal pickups can be medium output pickups. The Seymour Duncan Custom is a perfect example. The best sounding super high output pickup I've played is the Dimarzio X2N. Tons of volume and gain but still has a well rounded voicing that doesn't sound too harsh.

    • @Tsudkyk
      @Tsudkyk Рік тому +3

      I have been putting high output pickups in guitars for years, I finally tried some mid output pickups and I find my leads sound smoother and sweeter. Especially when switching to the neck position. I play a peavey 5150 but don’t use as much gain as it has on tap, so using the lower output pickup and cranking the amp a little more creates a more dynamic/ harmonic distortion- instead of edgy grind.

    • @saftovooey4569
      @saftovooey4569 Рік тому +2

      "you don't want to be running vintage pickups for death metal" HA! That's exactly what I do. Low output single coils.

  • @nicholasdasilva5699
    @nicholasdasilva5699 2 роки тому +27

    I'm morbidly curious what it sounds like in parallel wiring -- that would probably bring back some treble definition and maybe even make it usable for mere mortals. A 1 meg pot with a treble bleed cap should also help, since this seems like the kind of thing you'd want to play with the volume rolled back a bit and then dime back out for solos.

    • @Dewydidit
      @Dewydidit 2 роки тому +7

      That was my thought, how did it respond to the volume control? Is this just a powerful gain boost at 100%, but the majority of playing can be done at 50-60% on the volume with less treble loss?

    • @eilliwwasniahc
      @eilliwwasniahc Рік тому +3

      I ran a Dimarzio X2N back in the 80s when that was the over the top humbucker. I ran it 4 wire so I could run standard series, parallel, and single. I liked the parallel best, but I have always felt I am the only person in the world that appreciates parallel humbuckers.

    • @christopherharrold3045
      @christopherharrold3045 Рік тому +2

      @@eilliwwasniahc parallel has nicer tones

  • @potatoheadhaoy
    @potatoheadhaoy 2 роки тому +8

    Man I had an x2n in my les Paul back in high school. I preferred the duncan sh-8 invaders tonally but they’re both kinda like having a passive boost in your volume knob.
    It’s hilarious how much it distorts your signal on full, great if you want that 70s “insane volume boost into vintage amp” type of playing.

    • @100DollarHeadache
      @100DollarHeadache 2 роки тому +1

      I put an X2N in my Les Paul and love it. In series, it's the kick my Rat and Plexi need to give me metal. Split, it's a passable Strat bridge sound.

    • @potatoheadhaoy
      @potatoheadhaoy 2 роки тому +1

      @@100DollarHeadache I imagine that plexi is just screaming from all the gain and boost. As god intended of course.
      Interestingly I like the rat with lower gain settings lately. It’s a good treble booster and overdrive!

    • @100DollarHeadache
      @100DollarHeadache 2 роки тому +1

      @@potatoheadhaoy My Rat is actually a DIY clone, using LEDs for clipping to make it a Turbo. I prefer using it as a dirty boost, I mounted the LEDs externally to see when the pedal is providing clipping, and use this to balance it between guitars.

  • @necurrence1776
    @necurrence1776 Рік тому +2

    It was definitely worth my time checking this out.
    Thanks for sharing.
    It's not for me but I'm all in favour for innovation and testing stuff out.

  • @pyroheart6801
    @pyroheart6801 2 роки тому +4

    I have two 24k pickups that I used on a metal style guitar. It was a muddy mess. However, based on observations and research, it has its uses. If the hot pickup were lowered on the neck position, it can sustain for a long time. Plus, coil-tap and coil splitting can add tonal versatility as well

  • @83RED
    @83RED Рік тому +2

    Hi there, great found! Some people uses an overdrive not just to push the amp harder, but, most overdrives has a lo-cut at the first stage, and it makes the sound less fuzzier. More low end before gain staging causes mud on the tone If you try the SD-1 with the ton open, this will roll off the bottom end. If you do not crank up the level and keep the drive all the way down it will clean up the mud and makes it ore usable. OR you can use ONE HPF before hitting the first stage of gain but will never ever get the highs back since they were rolled off at the very beginning, right at the genesis. the maximum DC resistance tolerable to my ears is the 18.30 kΩ I got on my custom made Malagoli Eldorado pickup at my Kirk Hammet. more than that the signal becomes way much muddier. Also Output is not measured by DC resistance. The output level is measured in milivolts instead. Resistance is just consequence of the winding amount. I guess I could never use this in a production situation, they suck highs and for this I could use an equalizer before hiting the drives.

  • @AdamDallas
    @AdamDallas Рік тому +5

    Interesting, really highlights how when you increase coil windings, you really create that spike in midrange, with that "aw" sound really poking through. While I prefer the 8k pickup, even for high-gain stuff, this pickup really does serve a purpose. Would be great for black metal. It definitely makes me wonder if there's the need for ultra high output pickups these days. They definitely seemed more relevant with older style amps that really needed coaxed into distortion.

  • @Murgoh
    @Murgoh Рік тому +1

    Getting a proper soldering iron would probably improve your soldering results significantly. Those "gun type" soldering irons are not meant for electronic work.

  • @eyeamnecyrb4567
    @eyeamnecyrb4567 2 роки тому +12

    imagine how crazy it would be if there were four double hotrails on a guitar

    • @TheGalilee416
      @TheGalilee416 2 роки тому

      😂😂😂

    • @hchoe741
      @hchoe741 2 роки тому +1

      Its been done. I don't remember the exact guitar, but Nigel from Spinal Tap had something like that made by Music Man.

    • @SWBaek117
      @SWBaek117 Рік тому

      those are called quad rails, kramer and some others already have those

  • @lespoy445
    @lespoy445 7 місяців тому

    You can run these through a high pass cap, and add a bass pass resistor to add some bass back.. These also work nice in reverse polarity with the neck pick up, and put a super switch to either the super distortion bridge or the neck on a Gibson type pot blend circuit, so one of the out of phase coils bends into the other in phase coil, and the blend knob works as a nice tone control by using one pickup to cancel the bass frequency from the others.

  • @SuicidalGrind
    @SuicidalGrind 2 роки тому +5

    I wonder what it sounds like through a maxed out HM-2 Chainsaw tone.

    • @MyDemon32
      @MyDemon32 2 роки тому +1

      Say goodbye to your ears cause that thing would sound like a tv-static with the volume turned up to 11

    • @Rex-golf_player810
      @Rex-golf_player810 Місяць тому

      ​@@MyDemon32it might just sound like a strong fuzz lololol

  • @Robothut
    @Robothut Рік тому +1

    Would be interesting to hear how this 54K pickup sounds in the clean position if you turned the guitar volume down to say 1/3 level. That way the pickup should not be over driving the amp input and should be clean. Then when its lead time just turn the guitar volume up a bit.

  • @Ripzalot
    @Ripzalot 2 роки тому +7

    I love to hear it tested with downtuned chugs.

    • @masterofreality230
      @masterofreality230 2 роки тому

      looser strings might not vibrate as much due to the magnetic field, lol

    • @JustZaker
      @JustZaker 2 роки тому +3

      @@masterofreality230heavier gauge strings counteract that.

  • @jameslewis2635
    @jameslewis2635 2 роки тому +5

    Interesting pickup. If you still have it in that guitar, why not try using it with a Tube Screamer type pedal - but set it up to cut the signal slightly in order to enable a 'clean' channel. My theory is that with the way a Tube Screamer tends to cut the mids and effectively boost higher frequencies it could be a good match for this pickup. An EQ pedal could be a good alternative as well.

  • @LeifGrahamsson
    @LeifGrahamsson 2 роки тому +6

    This video is inadvertantly a GREAT example of the difference the pickup choice can make to a guitar. Have to say, I do love the sheer growl of that pickup.

    • @Marta1Buck
      @Marta1Buck 2 роки тому +3

      This is extreme example

    • @LeifGrahamsson
      @LeifGrahamsson 2 роки тому +1

      @@Marta1Buck definitely, it shows the level of difference possible because of that.

    • @allanallan4791
      @allanallan4791 2 роки тому +2

      Pickups don't change your tones as much as the speaker and mic placement do.

    • @LeifGrahamsson
      @LeifGrahamsson 2 роки тому

      @@allanallan4791 fully agree with you, I just think it is fascinating to hear the difference they do make via such disparately designed pickups.

    • @18hot30
      @18hot30 2 роки тому +1

      @@allanallan4791 as is obviously shown in this video loooool. not saying the other factors aren;t in play but come on, you saying with a different mic placement and the speaker he could have gotten cleans out of that one?

  • @BuddieOLLi
    @BuddieOLLi 2 роки тому +1

    I am impressed. How Clear the high Gain Sounds.

  • @ATthemusician
    @ATthemusician Рік тому +5

    I'm getting ready to wind my own humbuckers and was worried about 14k being too much 😆

  • @gitarmats
    @gitarmats Рік тому +1

    It's so hot it picks up the strings of your neighbour's guitar.

  • @feebypeels2883
    @feebypeels2883 2 роки тому +5

    When did people stop measuring the mV of output to describe the OUTPUT? This is a huge pet peeve of mine.

    • @claudevieaul1465
      @claudevieaul1465 2 роки тому +1

      It's always difficult to compare pups - it's never just the resistance, it's also the type magnets and wire gauges that determine the actual output level.
      But most high output pickups use ceramic magnets, and since 43gauge is more or less the industry standard, the easier measurable resistance in kOhms has become synonymous with level of output.

  • @midenking9651
    @midenking9651 Рік тому +1

    I use to run a Dimarzio X2N in the neck, and it was BEAUTIFUL. Paired with a SH1B (essentially dimebags but with a Dimarzio instead of a bill Lawrence) was incredibly together

  • @MFKitten
    @MFKitten 2 роки тому +4

    This would be interesting for doom metal. Also, maybe they could use a neodymium magnet to make up for the loss highs?

    • @Eliphas_Elric
      @Eliphas_Elric 2 роки тому +2

      Idk man that pickup would make any fuzz pedal shit bricks.

    • @MFKitten
      @MFKitten 2 роки тому +1

      @@Eliphas_Elric you wouldn't need fuzz pedals :p

    • @DrRepper
      @DrRepper 2 роки тому +4

      It would be an absolutely terrible doom pickup. Hot pickups are dogshit for low tunings when they're 11k, nevermind 54k. Tune this to drop A and it's going to sound like you've got a mattress in front if your amp

    • @Eliphas_Elric
      @Eliphas_Elric 2 роки тому

      @@DrRepper Facts.
      If yall haven't check the Dimarzio Fortitude. I know Gojira ain't doom but Joe's sig pickup dooms.

  • @KrisisVal
    @KrisisVal 2 роки тому

    The loss of treble is actually a product of both resistance and capacitance in the pickup, the more turns on a pickup, and thinner insulating layer, generally the more capacitance. and the thinner the wire (to allow more turns in the same size), the higher the resistance, which together with the capacitance forms a low pass filter, filters out treble.
    And it's also the reason often older pickups that use plain enamel wire have more treble than newer pickups with poly wire, the plain enamel insulation layer is thicker so the capacitance is lower, less treble loss.

  • @the-j-caster
    @the-j-caster 2 роки тому +3

    Not a fan of that pick up at all but I have got their "Old Timer Hair Spray" bridge pickup for a super strat and that is fantastic!

  • @Hottachych
    @Hottachych Рік тому

    54kOhm is DC RESISTANCE! It's not the same thing as output level, which is normally measured in volts. They correlate in pickups if other parameters (particularly wire gauge) stay constant. But high resistance alone is not indicator of high output. It may be result of thinner wire being used in the pickup, which would hurt the output level.

  • @thomashalley7258
    @thomashalley7258 Рік тому +3

    Im finding that I like lower output pickups so you can have some versatility with the tone vs a hot pickup that just pushes all the time.

    • @cornfilledscreamer614
      @cornfilledscreamer614 Рік тому +1

      Exactly. With today's high gain amps, it's pretty silly to have a high output pup. Weaker is better nowadays!

    • @saftovooey4569
      @saftovooey4569 Рік тому +2

      Yeah, I'm a metal guy, and I actually hate overwound humbuckers (or humbuckers in general.) I only use low output single coils. WAY more tone. Just listen to Yngwie Malmsteen's tone.

    • @cornfilledscreamer614
      @cornfilledscreamer614 Рік тому +1

      @@saftovooey4569 These pickups would have been great to have 40+ years ago - certainly with old Marshalls & likewise amps, but it's just too much now... Can't get the wood sound with them now!

    • @thomashalley7258
      @thomashalley7258 Рік тому +1

      @@cornfilledscreamer614 oh ya. I plugged into a marshall origin 50 and single coils couldn't get anything out the amp without a pedal. But put some strong humbuckers through it and it sounds awesome.

  • @danilsp3298
    @danilsp3298 2 роки тому

    "If it can be done rather than if it should be done"
    Love that, crazy stuff

  • @danielbrowniel
    @danielbrowniel Рік тому +4

    I would like to hear this in a high gain amp.

  • @kevinjokipii4260
    @kevinjokipii4260 Рік тому +2

    Why not show the comparison of signal amplitude instead of DC resistance?

  • @darklyripley6138
    @darklyripley6138 2 роки тому +10

    Kinda disappointing that you didn’t do a legit metal tone to see what this would be like.

  • @burtenplays
    @burtenplays 2 роки тому +1

    Cool as hell. Sounded great especially on "clean".

  • @bigbo1764
    @bigbo1764 2 роки тому +6

    Honestly, with a treble boost, this might be a killer pickup; more natural and classic distortion, rather than having to use a pedal.

  • @bstoner1300
    @bstoner1300 2 роки тому +1

    So that turned out wayyyy better than I expected

  • @dajohnpreskott2928
    @dajohnpreskott2928 2 роки тому +3

    "Гражданская оборона" moment

    • @yobrethren
      @yobrethren 2 роки тому

      Get yourselves "Поносные Звучания" for a low low price of several hundred of a perfectly nice guitar and overkill p-ups

  • @wizrom3046
    @wizrom3046 Рік тому

    I'm an electronics guy, pickup output is not measured in k ohms that is its DC impedance.
    Output is measured as volts peak to peak into a known load, so to properly compare two pickups you would measure output voltage (peak to peak) for each pickup on an oscilloscope while hitting the strings with the same force. If one pickup makes 1v p/p and the other makes 2v p/p the second pickup has TWICE the output.
    I bought an original dimarzio X2N super distortion in about 1982 when they came out. It had the big bar magnets. Even for metal playing it was muddy because if the magnets are too strong they pull on the strings influencing the strings. I played it for years but had to run the pickup quite low (away from strings) to reduce the muddiness.

  • @sixstringtv1
    @sixstringtv1 2 роки тому +4

    first

  • @sunn_bass
    @sunn_bass 2 роки тому +1

    I'm surprised it had the clarity and as much highs as it did. Definitely not for everyone but I can see some folks in some styles experimenting and making it work.
    Great video.

  • @alexanderbelov6892
    @alexanderbelov6892 Рік тому

    6:53 High frequencies are filtered out with inductivity (L) of the coil(s). Reactive resistance or impedance of coils is calculated by formula Ra(coil)= 2*Pi*f*L. High the frequencies are more suppressed than low frequencies. While more L means more filtering for the same frequency.

  • @sole__doubt
    @sole__doubt Рік тому +1

    Excellent review, you got some nice chops too. :)

  • @iananderson4355
    @iananderson4355 2 роки тому

    Just to clarify, you're measuring the series resistance of the coils of the pickup. That's not "output." BUT, given the math that determines the output voltage of a pickup ( E = blv), "E" being the output voltage, "b" being strength of the magnet, "l" being the length of wire in the coil (winds), a longer coil (and therefore higher series resistance) results in higher output voltage. So, "54 k Ohms" reads "54 kilohms" and means 54,000 Ohms series resistance. Which, as you said, is totally bananas to the point of hilarity. I thoroughly enjoy your videos, btw!

  • @shinkhoo3082
    @shinkhoo3082 2 роки тому

    Good point about how a pickup with relatively high DC resistance in the neck position can produce a smooth, Tube Screamer always on lead sound.
    Steve Morse in fact uses one in this similar vein, with his signature Dimarzio DP205 having 21kΩ DCR.
    Stating the obvious, the huge DC resistance in this 54kΩ seems to have removed the twanginess while boosting the mids when directly compared to the 8kΩ pickup.

  • @hkguitar1984
    @hkguitar1984 2 роки тому +2

    I'm pretty sure the coils of that pickup are wired in series, it would be very interesting to wire them in parallel.
    Output would drop by almost half, however you might recover a little bit of the higher frequencies. It's possible the parallel wiring might shift the peak resonance frequency to a higher point.
    Very interesting for sure.

  • @steelwarrior105
    @steelwarrior105 Рік тому +1

    I love all the random potentially obscure songs KDH puts in his demos. Safe to say that a rerecording of the Strong Arm of the Law album with this pickup needs to happen

    • @DonnyZofChaos
      @DonnyZofChaos Рік тому +1

      I stopped to check for a Saxon comment and was not disappointed !

    • @paulbrown8402
      @paulbrown8402 Рік тому

      I'm 99% sure he played Dallas 1pm, which is on Strong Arm Of The Law

    • @steelwarrior105
      @steelwarrior105 Рік тому +1

      @@paulbrown8402 definitely

  • @migalito1955
    @migalito1955 Рік тому

    Interesting.
    I think your spot on in that the high impedance of the pick-up is contributing to cutting off the higher frequencies for the same reason using a 200 foot line between amp and guitar will do the same thing. This can perhaps be EQ'd if nothing else...
    I guess its all in your aim. I started building acoustic stringed instruments in my retirement which led to building pick-ups, pre-amps and power amps. I would not be happy with the signal hitting the rails of the pre-amp and distorting as it seemed to be doing in the test because I like a clean and flat response and if an emphasis then in the mid-range. But presumably you can always build or buy or adjust a pre-amp that the pick-up's signal can swing between without hitting the rails leading to clipping.
    Sure was louder for sure, but if you looked at the peak to peak voltage on a scope of the pick-up by itself and compared it to its 8K cousin the difference would be substantial and since op-amps which are the heart of pre-amps only care about voltage difference between the signal and virtual ground with current not mattering its bound to be louder at any gain setting and whether its worth it is a matter of aim and what its being supplied to.

  • @gbass7328
    @gbass7328 Рік тому

    The high end lose is from the increased coil inductance from more windings not resistance. Series inductance is like parallel capacitance like a tone control with a cap.

  • @plekguy
    @plekguy Рік тому

    A genuine mud-bucker. As a professional luthier for over 40 years, even most my metal players wouldn't like that sound. No articulation, no definition. Lindy Fralin - a pickup master - has graphs that show the relationship between output and high-end roll-off. Lots of variables here like what magnets, alnico II, alnico IV, alnico V, ceramic? I've found that about 12K - 16K alnico V pickups seem to be the sweet spot in a bridge, and about 8K-9K in the neck. Tone is always subjective to your style of playing and amp, but 54K is just way too hot to be practical. Thanks for sharing! Rock On!

    • @Patrick-857
      @Patrick-857 10 місяців тому

      Doom metal players would love it. Put it through a maxed out Proco RAT or a Big Muff, into an already breaking up big clean amp and make diesel generators noises. Perfect.

  • @andybarker5687
    @andybarker5687 2 роки тому +1

    Love the Dimarzio x2n

  • @AndrewAHayes
    @AndrewAHayes Рік тому

    13.6K Alnico 5 is the hottest Humbucker pickup I have and I don't think I need anything hotter than this. I drive a 1973 WEM Dominator MKII amplifier, I once hated this amp but now it is the only tube amp I have left and refuse to sell it, I now love this amp!

  • @Kharnimani
    @Kharnimani 2 роки тому +1

    "Yeah, but your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn't stop to think if they should."

  • @NathanMichalik
    @NathanMichalik 2 роки тому +1

    Glenn deserves this in his HB replacement guitar. Soley for his opinions on headstocks.

  • @UmasPapa
    @UmasPapa 2 роки тому +1

    I want the coil tap!! Also super interested in what it sounds like into a line level input. Also very interested to see what is sounds like into an amp with low preamp gain. An amp where the V1 tube is a unity gain 12au7. Also should be 60w power output or 120w to get the full effect

  • @zandig666
    @zandig666 2 роки тому +2

    Wonder what that equates to a superD's 425mV output

  • @ADR.Hi-Gain
    @ADR.Hi-Gain 2 роки тому

    KDH: Back in the day I installed a Seymour Duncan : "Heavy Metal Live Wire" 18V in my 86 Jackson plugged into a Mesa/Boogie .50 cal and it was SICK as Hell!!!! I would not clean up (who cares) through a Roland Jazz chorus head. I still have it! one of the very 1st ones. It crushed the 9V EMG 81's!!!

  • @JohnWiku
    @JohnWiku 2 роки тому +1

    I can still see this pickup getting hotter, just replace the ceramic magnet for a same sized neodymium magnet, I bet even at half thickness is already pushing the output even further beyond.
    This guitar needs a 1meg vol pot to allow more highs to pass through, this plus the neodymium magnet, you'd create so much tone that you could start a black hole on earth.

  • @casanovafunkenstein5090
    @casanovafunkenstein5090 2 роки тому +1

    One thing that I'd like to know is whether they are using just the one coil or tapping both coils when you make use of the additional wire coming out of the pickup.
    If they're actually shorting out both of the two coils (giving you a more reasonable output to enable cleans with the option of going harder for distortion sounds but still retaining the hum cancellation in both modes) I can see it being a really cool idea.
    Kind of like having a passive booster in the guitar like the new Yamaha Revstars have, except that they do it with a small step up transformer instead of it being part of the pickup design.
    I think it sounds pretty good but it's definitely not very versatile without the coil tap/split feature.

  • @brendanhoffmann8402
    @brendanhoffmann8402 2 роки тому

    I've had a Dimarzio Steve's Special humbucker from the early 2000s. It's a very hot pickup, 17k Ohms. I also have a Seymour Duncan humbucker and a pickup from a Fender Jaguar in the same guitar. I get a good range of sounds from it. It's a Squier Affinity series guitar body and has it's quirks as far as intonation but it's pretty good.

  • @boddumblues
    @boddumblues 2 роки тому +1

    Remember fast Eddie from Motörhead used a X2N and 2 SDS-1 to great effect with older Marshalls. Lemmy liked his tone!

  • @riverryan6216
    @riverryan6216 2 роки тому

    More content like this, please. Less industry drama monologuing, thank you.
    Just a 👍 today, but keep it up and I'll finally subscribe.

  • @greggee1302
    @greggee1302 3 місяці тому

    A great experiment for this pickup would be to swap out the 500k volume pot...for a 1 meg... or "zero point" potentiometer.
    250k pots (that help tame single coils), darken the sound of a humbucker. 500k pots let more highs thru, so humbuckers are not too dark and compressed. A 1 meg pot lets even more highs thru...and might really let this pickup breathe and sound great. A "zero point" pot can essentially make the resistance of the pot disappear (when in the zero position), ...as if there is no pot...and the pickup is wired straight to the output jack.

  • @brCharlieNagy
    @brCharlieNagy 7 місяців тому

    Great demo, Young man 👌

  • @xdoctorblindx
    @xdoctorblindx 2 роки тому

    Two amendments. First, high-output pickups aren't "pushing the power tubes"; they are hitting the first preamp stage. Second, the loss of high-end information is due to capacitance (like in a really long instrument cable), not resistance.

  • @ShaelynneDFuller
    @ShaelynneDFuller 2 роки тому +2

    I'd like to hear this with a 1 meg pot to see if it will let more of the highs through.

  • @HearGear
    @HearGear 12 днів тому

    This is quite cool, I can't really see a use for that super hot pickup though but a fun project to test out. But I think you got a serious problem with your guitar, I would say that the neck is not correctly mounted to the body because the strings does not line up, its a common problem for some people building their own parts casters that has not build very much guitars before. Or because it's a hardtail bridge it can also be that the bridge is not lined up correctly. But.. that guitar looks super cool in any way possible. :D :D

  • @3rdmm
    @3rdmm 2 роки тому

    If there's a contest on for "hottest pickup", it'll probably be pretty easy to get one of the hundreds of pickup makers to do a one-off with an even smaller wire gauge. 100k ought to be easily achievable, though it does require increasingly careful winding as the wire gets thinner.

  • @S745
    @S745 6 місяців тому

    Thanks for the idea. I'll order the same one for 8 strings.

  • @lonec1777
    @lonec1777 2 роки тому +1

    I like a single coil neck sound for leads and cleans. If I had this pickup I would use it as the bridge pickup when I switch to rhythm to act as a booster, it may sound good.

  • @seric4546
    @seric4546 2 роки тому +1

    Interesting video. It looks like the neck alignment of your purple Strat there could use a little adjustment.

  • @runingblackbear
    @runingblackbear Рік тому

    Peavey guitar in 1983 came with them pick ups in the bridge and neck but traded it in for fender stratocaster deluxe plus in 1989

  • @RacerX888
    @RacerX888 Рік тому

    I have a Strat with a Bill Lawrence L500XL, which is an extremely high output. I have compared it to Super Distortions and it blows them away. I currently have it in a 3 humbucker pickup Strat in the neck position, and found the extreme high output pickups sound great in the neck, more so than the bridge as I find them simply too much for anything but extreme metal in the bridge, or require too much retuning the amp controls to allow for the extreme output of the bridge compared to the neck.

  • @GoodVolition
    @GoodVolition 2 роки тому +1

    As a general rule passive boosts will drain highs. A high roll off is inevitable. Actives or peds are a better choice if you need to preserve the high end.

  • @deeomayall
    @deeomayall 2 роки тому

    7:43 is that inspired to Dallas 1PM by Saxon? This is one awesome little tribute :)

  • @rowlandstraylight
    @rowlandstraylight Рік тому

    DC resistance isn't a direct measurement of output. It's an indication of *inductance* which one of the two parameters that are actually important, but it's only valid for identical construction and identical wire gauge. Inductance also increases with coil area and the amount and magnetic permeability of core material.
    Inductance is also a measure of the cut-off frequency of the pickup, they're intrinsically low-pass.
    The series resistance of a pickup is insignificant in the circuit. Read up on parallel LCR filters for more information, the R value here is the parallel sum of your volume pot and the input resistance of your amplifier, and C is the capacitance of your guitar cable. It probably dwarfs that of the pickup at around 500pF.
    That pickup is crazy hot though.

  • @InTheSh8
    @InTheSh8 2 роки тому +1

    The high E-string on that guitar, is it even playable at 20th fret? Seems the bridge is not accurately enough aligned with the neck or vice versa.

  • @TheHighwinder
    @TheHighwinder Рік тому

    The problem with that kind of winding and magnetization is that it will actually act as a dampening brake on the strings, knocking down the sustain.

  • @embreesmith7613
    @embreesmith7613 2 роки тому +2

    Thanks, Kirlan. 🙂

  • @brutesmagootes3996
    @brutesmagootes3996 2 роки тому +2

    This can’t be real. I mean, Glenn has scientifically determined that there are “no” to “hardly any” to “no significant” differences between pickups. So this just can’t be real.
    He would like you to however buy his signature guitar strings that somehow DO make a difference. 🤣

  • @carwynvan
    @carwynvan Рік тому +1

    It would be fantastic for Doom Metal. Having that darker, massively over-compressed goodness that pushes anything to the point of fuzz