On with part four.
Here we see the new Blitz Spirit neck humbucker nestling in
the rout as I tried the ‘legs’ out for depth.
I usually find a couple of snags in any job … and I found one here. The
long legs on the nickel silver base plates fitted in fine, but the clumsy
metric height adjustment screws fitted to most ‘import’ guitars, including the
Vintage won’t fit US/Gibson spec
baseplates. The only US spec adjustment
screws I had in stock were 1” rather
than the vintage Gibbo 1.25”. This means that I won’t be able lower the pickup
enough to clear the strings properly when playing up at the last two frets. Never
mind … I ordered a bunch of the correct screws and resigned myself to living
with a guitar with 20 usable frets till they arrive!
Back to the rear of the guitar
And here’s the completed job.
I’ve insulated the output jack cable with 9mm rayon loom
tape for neatness … and the job’s a good-en!
Time to plug in and test out: the original Wilkinsons
sounded thick and quite powerful, but with a really ‘clouded’ top end on the
neck pickup sounding ‘soupy’ and poorly defined. The original bridge pickup sounded
a touch thin, with a gritty top end, and overall a bit screechy. The Blitz Spirits
are a cooler wind 7k and 7.9k as opposed to 8.5 and 14k for the Wilkinsons and
have the softer more rounded sounding alnico 2 magnets. Plugged into the clean
channel of my Laney LC30 mk2 the difference was pretty spectacular: even with a
cooler wind and magnets the ‘Spirits’ are subjectively much louder than the Wilkinsons.
Plenty of woody tones are available, and nice sparkling highs available from
both pickups. Hummm now for the acid test … cranked tones … what everyone
judges a Les Paul by. In a word ‘smooth’!
Keeping sweet, singing tones that break
up as you dig in is easy … and as the gain gets towards the hard rock/ metal
end, the pickups natural compression flatters your playing nicely.
The combination of ‘Iced T’s’ weight and vintage style neck
and the Blitz Spirit’s soft, smooth and expressive character makes for a really
nice ‘blues/blues rock LP clone. Quite versatile enough for hard/heavy rock,
but perhaps lacking that scream for the metal end of things. Though I have to
say there is more than a hint of a famous leather top hat wearer when the
pressure is applied!
I’m very happy … though waiting for the screws to lower the
neck pickup a tad. I will post some
sound files as soon as I can.
2 comments:
Hi, I'm thinking do a upgrade in my V100 too, and a liked a lot your post.
What kind of pot did you use, a Long or Short Shaft?
Thanks !
linear or logarithmic pots?
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