DiMarzio Forum
DimarzioForum.Com => The Pickup Place => Topic started by: Orkhan Julfa on March 16, 2017, 12:04:26 PM
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Hi!
While Evo 2 and Original Evolution my favorite bridge humbuckers I am not happy with Evolution neck. It is too boomy for me whatever guitar, strings, amp I used with it.
Is it possible to mod this pickup to reduce its lows or low mids. Magnet swap, pole screws or base plate change? I like modding. And modded all my instruments.
...and if it is impossible to brighten up this pickup what pickup I should use for neck? I've tried long time ago LiquiFire and Paf Joe. Liked them. Even LiquiFire was not bassy like evo neck. But these pickups were on basswood guitars. So I do not know will they work on my alder guitar and will they match good with Evo 2 on bridge. I play mostly old school heavy metal and neo-classical shredding. And wish neck humbucker sound with some single coil bite. More close to Malmsteen sound as it possible with humbucker.
But first priority for me it is make Evolution neck more bright. Make it less boomy and do not loose power.
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I dunno how to make the pickup less bassy but if you want an articulate, hot neck pickup for shred - Super 2. It's damn near perfect; super clear for those sweep/tap/legato runs.
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Isn't it too powerful?
DiMazrio charts say it is 400mV while Evo 2 375mV.
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That was my problem when I first got the evo neck. Too boomy and a bit muddy sometimes. I replaced it with hfh that solved the boomy problem, however it lacks mids and body. Now I'm happy with my paf joe.
Looks like you need a super 2 or a dimarzio IBZ neck.
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Isn't it too powerful?
DiMazrio charts say it is 400mV while Evo 2 375mV.
Nah, don't worry about it. In reality those numbers don't mean much.
You could always go with the Humbucker From Hell as it's pretty bright and snarly but I think you will love the S2 for that style, as I do.
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Yeah. I noticed DiMarzio's tone chart not so accurate.
And plus for Super 2. It has similar poles like Evolutions :)
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The Humbucker from Hell might just do the trick. Definitely has a clear and articulate low end, even high up the fretboard. However, it does sound a tad more single coil like. If you want a more humbucker type tone, you could always try PAF Joe, or maybe if you don't mind a low output humbucker, try the Air Classic neck. Never tried the PAF Master neck. Maybe that might work too
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What I did to some neck humbuckers to de-muddy them was to remove either the screws under the 6th and 5th strings on the neck side coil or to remove the screws under the bass strings from the neck side coil. This has worked well for several pickups. However, if the pickup is covered I found the effect to be minimal and not enough.
This is a trick that was posted here by RayBarbeeMusic before.
Good luck,
Stephan
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What I did to some neck humbuckers to de-muddy them was to remove either the screws under the 6th and 5th strings on the neck side coil or to remove the screws under the bass strings from the neck side coil. This has worked well for several pickups. However, if the pickup is covered I found the effect to be minimal and not enough.
This is a trick that was posted here by RayBarbeeMusic before.
Good luck,
Stephan
It seems like I have found solution. Trick with screws really helped me. But I just did it with a little different way. Just lowered down pickup itself from strings and rised up all screws for a 2mm. It is not perfect what I want but far better than it was before.
Rising only neck side bobbin's crew or removing will causing pickup lost not only its lows and power and impact too.
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What I did to some neck humbuckers to de-muddy them was to remove either the screws under the 6th and 5th strings on the neck side coil or to remove the screws under the bass strings from the neck side coil. This has worked well for several pickups. However, if the pickup is covered I found the effect to be minimal and not enough.
This is a trick that was posted here by RayBarbeeMusic before.
Good luck,
Stephan
Depends on the humbucker itself. Sometimes you then have a severe imbalance of volume across the strings. In most cases IME, it's better to just remove all the screws instead
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Agree. It depends on pickup itself.
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Depends on the humbucker itself. Sometimes you then have a severe imbalance of volume across the strings. In most cases IME, it's better to just remove all the screws instead
Indeed. With some pickups it worked well, with some the difference was only subtle and did not solve the issue.
Cheers Stephan
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I had the same problem with Evolution neck and added a capacitor in series. Now it is perfect!
Cheap and simple fix.
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I had the same problem with Evolution neck and added a capacitor in series. Now it is perfect!
Cheap and simple fix.
Oh yeah. That definitely might work too. Never knew why I never thought of this at the time of commenting. To be honest though, I never thought the Evolution neck was every boomy. But I guess we all hear things differently, and maybe even using the same pickup on different guitars may yield different results.
IMO, sometimes what people call "boomy", that could be tweaked by the pickups and electronics, or even changing the saddles and/or bridge assembly to a different material or to a better quality one
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I had the same problem with Evolution neck and added a capacitor in series. Now it is perfect!
Cheap and simple fix.
Wow! Really? What capacitance did you use?
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I had the same problem with Evolution neck and added a capacitor in series. Now it is perfect!
Cheap and simple fix.
Oh yeah. That definitely might work too. Never knew why I never thought of this at the time of commenting. To be honest though, I never thought the Evolution neck was every boomy. But I guess we all hear things differently, and maybe even using the same pickup on different guitars may yield different results.
IMO, sometimes what people call "boomy", that could be tweaked by the pickups and electronics, or even changing the saddles and/or bridge assembly to a different material or to a better quality one
Tried this pup on a couple guitars. Every time it sounds boomy. Tried tweaking its screws, height. No drastically result.
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I guess I understand what you all mean by boomy. But was the EVO neck installed on a 22-fret or 24-fret guitar?
I've noticed the position (also the wood of course, smaller impact tough) really changes the bass EQ of a pickup. I remember having tested a long time ago a JS1000 with a paf pro in it: I found it too boomy, but I bought many years later a paf pro which was in a 24-fret RG and I founded it too thin. The EVO neck for me is great because even the low notes are percussive enough and this is what I was searching for.
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I had the same problem with Evolution neck and added a capacitor in series. Now it is perfect!
Cheap and simple fix.
Oh yeah. That definitely might work too. Never knew why I never thought of this at the time of commenting. To be honest though, I never thought the Evolution neck was every boomy. But I guess we all hear things differently, and maybe even using the same pickup on different guitars may yield different results.
IMO, sometimes what people call "boomy", that could be tweaked by the pickups and electronics, or even changing the saddles and/or bridge assembly to a different material or to a better quality one
Tried this pup on a couple guitars. Every time it sounds boomy. Tried tweaking its screws, height. No drastically result.
I see. Lastly, have you tried it through a different amp setup or whatnot?
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I guess I understand what you all mean by boomy. But was the EVO neck installed on a 22-fret or 24-fret guitar?
I've noticed the position (also the wood of course, smaller impact tough) really changes the bass EQ of a pickup. I remember having tested a long time ago a JS1000 with a paf pro in it: I found it too boomy, but I bought many years later a paf pro which was in a 24-fret RG and I founded it too thin. The EVO neck for me is great because even the low notes are percussive enough and this is what I was searching for.
As on 22 fret guitar so on 24. Wish I this pickup has less bass and more high-mids.