All input from experience is welcome

Thank you! For some reason I thought the opposite - I thought the staggered heights were intended for better balance, but then there are so many radiuses these days. Anyway, this helps me immensely! Thank you.golem wrote: ↑Thu Oct 01, 2020 3:53 pm In most cases the flat-pole pickup will give you a better string balance. The high E won't get buried in the mix like a staggered-pole pickup can. You will also notice that the two low strings are louder than a staggered-pole set, and the G string does not overpower the others.
Well unfortunately my point is actually Jason Lollar's point.andrewsrea wrote: ↑Thu Oct 01, 2020 5:48 pm I agree with prior posts and will elaborate.
I think what @golem was saying, is that the low E and A can get lost and the D & G can sound strong in a mix with a staggered magnet set up. In 440 tuning, the fundamental of the D (D-4) G (G4) & B (B4) get into the vocal range and the human ear favors those tones. So even though the staggered magnets presents a more 'electrically balanced' note, your ear hears it as louder. Which is why Fender made the B string magnet the smallest and lowest. So to Golem's point, no-stagger sounds more balanced and to @Chocol8 's point, trying to compensate usually has other outcomes.
Human hearing is non linear in a bunch of ways.
That said, some prefer the stagger. One because a lot of popular recordings had it (Jimi Hendrix, Stevie Ray Vaughn, Mark Knopfler, etc.). I think also because it naturally helps a guitar it into a rock band scenario. The low E and A sometimes competes with the Bass guitar.
I like both and to Golem's point, I suspect my finger approach may compensate.
Awesome info there... and I'm back on the fence
I'm nearly certain that [mention]andrewsrea[/mention] either does this or actually magnetizes some of the polepieces different amounts (or both?) with some of his pickups. Obviously, he'll correct me if I'm wrong but it's fun what he can do with custom winds.Gear_Junky wrote: ↑Sat Oct 03, 2020 3:18 pm In my search I came across some pickups with mixed magnets (dubbed "hybrid") - i.e. Alnico II slugs under the three treble strings and Alnico V slugs under the three bass strings. I won't be buying that, but it's a curious enough concept.
They look like a good choice for my taste. The bridge sounds like what you might find in the 50's originals. The neck also sounds like what you'd get with the 1950 thru 1964. They were wound with 43ga wire and typically came in at 9K to 10.5K.Gear_Junky wrote: ↑Sat Oct 03, 2020 3:14 pm The neck has a higher DCR vs. bridge, but I instinctively figured that I could compensate with adjustment. And after doing some reading I think it won't be as mismatched as might appear. Neck uses 43 gauge wire ("overwound" and reportedly 9 kOhm DCR) vs. bridge's 42 gauge (reportedly 7.2 kOhm). Since DCR is not really a measure of "output" on differently constructed pickups, I figure I have a good chance of them being "just right" or close to that. We'll see.
Thank you! That's what I figured after doing some reading too, so sometimes it's good to go on instinct. We'll see. I didn't want expensive pickups for a sub-$100 guitar, but at the same time didn't want their more generic pickups either. This seemed like the sweet spot. I like the "vintage correct" components bit, even if it's just psychosomatic.andrewsrea wrote: ↑Sun Oct 04, 2020 1:06 pm They look like a good choice for my taste. The bridge sounds like what you might find in the 50's originals. The neck also sounds like what you'd get with the 1950 thru 1964. They were wound with 43ga wire and typically came in at 9K to 10.5K.
Together, they should not sound mismatched. For the original 50's Teles, it has to do more with the resonance peak and magnetism of each magnet (including the standard Tele bridge that mounts the pickup), as well as the proximity to the strings. The bridge pup being typically closer to the strings than the neck.
Let us know what you think of them when you get them installed!
You & I look at that very differently my friend.Gear_Junky wrote: ↑Sun Oct 04, 2020 3:02 pm
I didn't want expensive pickups for a sub-$100 guitar, but at the same time didn't want their more generic pickups either.
I know, Mickey. You have excellent taste in pickups and guitars. And your logic is sound. In my case it's part of the "sport" - how good can I get it sounding on the cheap?
Funny you should mention your Whino because I've just spent the past half hour or so playing mine.Gear_Junky wrote: ↑Sun Oct 04, 2020 4:03 pmI know, Mickey. You have excellent taste in pickups and guitars. And your logic is sound. In my case it's part of the "sport" - how good can I get it sounding on the cheap?
I do break this rule sometimes, if I can score pickups at decent prices. I.e. I have HS Filtertrons in my WNO-630 "Whino" and my red SJM. I can't prove it, but I suspect that between them and TV Jones it's more a matter of preference than quality in terms of tone. Some people prefer TV, others - Gretsch (we're talking current, not vintage). There's a member here trying to exchange his TV Classic for a Gretsch, you know, you've commented on his thread.
I agree with your concept!mickey wrote: ↑Sun Oct 04, 2020 3:18 pmYou & I look at that very differently my friend.Gear_Junky wrote: ↑Sun Oct 04, 2020 3:02 pm
I didn't want expensive pickups for a sub-$100 guitar, but at the same time didn't want their more generic pickups either.
The less I spend for the guitar itself, the more left over to spend on pickups.
My $60 SX STL-50 has $120+ Duncan pickups in it. I'm happy!![]()
This! A very important principle to grasp in life, along with the Pareto (80/20) "rule". You mentioned hype and I would even say superstitions. When you see certain classic pickups on eBay going for twice or more the price of a new TV Jones equivalent (or perhaps better), you realize that we are past diminishing returns and in pure hype zoneandrewsrea wrote: ↑Mon Oct 05, 2020 12:48 pm ...that pickups are subject to hype and the law of diminishing returns.
So yes - the right inexpensive guitar + a decent set of pups!