« Reply #2 on: March 08, 2021, 02:50:13 AM »
All Gibsons in the 50s had pickup sets that were spec'd to be identical (in practice they were not due to human effect, i.e. the turn counters were stopped manually - or they were not, and then the pickups had a few more turns of wire on them). Strings vibrate more over the neck pickup so more signal is generated. Setting identical pickups at the same distance to the strings will result in the neck pickup being louder than the bridge pickup. Whether this is a problem depends on how you use the pickups. E.g. if you regularily use the bridge pickup for rhythm and switch to the neck pickup for solos it may work fine. Or if you use the neck pickup for cleans only and switch to the bridge for crunch and lead. Problems likely arise when you want to switch between pickups and not change any settings at the amp or not adding/taking away pedals - in that case if you set the rig for the bridge pickup, the neck pickup may be muddy, and if you set it for the neck pickup, the bridge pickup may be too bright. Therefore many people (myself included) prefer a hotter bridge pickup.
Bottom line - I would not use a set of DP 103s but I want to be able to switch between pickups and not having to change settings. If that is not important to you, my concern would be irrelevant.
Cheers Stephan
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