From actual experience, who makes the quietest humbucker????
Is this a trick question ?????


If you want to make you pickups totally quiet, the best way is to ground them out. I tried this a couple of times and didn't like it very much![]()
If you want to make you pickups totally quiet, the best way is to ground them out. I tried this a couple of times and didn't like it very much![]()
Yeah. I understand Robert is a bit obsessed with this particular aspect of his tone (silence) but I myself am not. I love how strats quack and hum and humbucker laden mahogany animals hiss and bark loud.
To me, (a little) noise is part of what the electric guitar is all about
You described me perfectly! But the quiet signal fascination is the recording engineer in me.
It actually amazed at the Squirecaster. I can sit in front of my DSL40C, with 3/4 gain and hear nothing....like the volume was rolled off...when I hit the strings, it almost scares me...all of a sudden, this big sound explodes out of complete silence!
Neck PU: DiMarzio Pro Track
Bridge PU: DiMarzio Mo’Joe
I don't know if it's the guitar, electronics, or pick ups, but my ibanez js2400 is dead silent. Quietest guitar I've ever experienced.
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Yeah. I understand Robert is a bit obsessed with this particular aspect of his tone (silence) but I myself am not. I love how strats quack and hum and humbucker laden mahogany animals hiss and bark loud.
To me, (a little) noise is part of what the electric guitar is all about
Well put, Relic!That interesting Sergio, although Robert is fascinated from a sound engineers aspect of pickup observation, I have found some of the most 'magical' pickups to be old 50's-60's humbucker (full-size & minis) pups that happened to be un-potted, somewhat micro-phonic & subsequently subject to picking up noise!
I use that word 'magic' because those old pups tended to add sonic content to the guitars sound as volume & drive got brought into the playing situation! You could be playing & typically finding notes to grow & blossom with harmonics to the point different notes than the root note being played to mix in & even take over. This is a little different than the more typical Marshall tube amp power-chord fade to harmonics or what we can hear on say an old Boston Album.
A perfect example was my buddy's late 50's Gibson 175. Not only was that pickup un-potted & microphonic but DUH! the 175 was a hollow-body! Now that 'magic' guitar would simply come alive in your hands. We actually joked that it was Haunted! LOL But that crappy old guitar really could inspire me to play differently than I normally would tend to play, I often felt re-directed, almost like that haunted guitar was using me as a means for it to speak, almost like it was playing me! More than one 'spirited' outing on this guitar ended with me getting freaked by this thing & my having to take it off myself as the hairs on stood on end & my body tingled with the sensation of electricity! So 'Magic'?? Hell yeah! That bitch was magic!
So in the end I have to ask, what is the real importance of 'the quietest' pup besides the interest of the inquiring mind wanting to know. Isn't music & the recording of it about capturing that tangible 'magic' & ending up with a recording that is spirited & moving to others when they listen to it?
Hey, don't get me wrong, nobody wants a crappy sounding noisy guitar recording. But on the other hand, who doesn't want to capture an awesome & inspired guitar track that leaves the listener saying, "Hellz yeah! That was frik'n awesome!" ?
Just stuff that I always thought was worth thinking about when it came to pickups Rob. Does quiet & sterile necessarily equal better or best? I'm sure it depends on the situation but the answer definitely is,.. not always.
Good points made herein...
If you recall, I pulled a 1928 National Triolian Resophonic Resonator out of a collection to play on one of my songs in 2011. The dobro had been fitted with a pickup many years later, and it buzzed and hummed on the recording quite loudly...but since the song was about the blues giants from the 20's and 30's, I left it all in for character and effect.
I find that my 1987 Stratocaster has a very "wild" sound with blistering harmonics. Evidence of the intensity of the harmonics are present in a couple of video clips i posted, but between songs, I don't have to deal with microphonics etc.
When I'm not fighting the instrument, I feel more creative! ! !
and I tend to over-produce everything!