Another Pickup Question (full of consumer embarrassment)

edited September 2014 in Root
I've posted on another thread that I recently got an American Special. It's a wonderful guitar and I'm quite happy with it. I also have a knock off T-style guitar that was made in England. The wood and the hardware weren't bad, but the electronics and the pickups were, at best, mediocre.

I decided to change these so I got a StewMac wiring kit and a set of '51 Nocaster pickups. I had to re-route the control plate cavity, but other than that I just needed to install the pickups. I was nervous about doing the wiring since I'm a beginner at that, but it seemed to go alright until I tried it out, when I discovered that the bridge pickup didn't sound at all. (The neck installed fine and sounds fantastic). I thought it was the wiring, but someone on TDPRI suggested that I meter the bridge PU to make sure it was working. Which it is not. Dead as Marley's ghost (even more so).

I don't think that I can return it - bought at Amazon, threw the packaging away - so it's just a loss. My question is: should I just buy another Nocaster bridge PU (I'm leery of Fender's Quality Control, but love the pickups), or should I look for a third party pickup to match the bridge. I'm strongly leaning towards just getting the Fender, but I'd be curious to hear opinions. Note that the Nocaster is an Alnico 3 with fairly low output (7.5 on the bridge? In that range anyhow). Any opinions are appreciated!

Comments

  • A quick update. I called Fender and they have agreed to take the bridge pickup back; they'll test it and assuming my diagnosis is correct, they'll send me a new one. Very nice customer service. I'm still interested in people's opinions on various vintage-style bridge pickups, although this may be a topic that has been done to death.
  • Well, the pickups in my tele are a bit "hot"... not ridiculously so, I would call them "hot vintage"... the bridge is a Rio Grande Muy Grande, which is like a beefier vintage pickup, and the neck is a Fender Texas Special, like a vintage neck pickup but with more overdrive and bite. I have been playing them for 15 years now, with no reason to change.

    HOWEVER- I have recently been shopping for a new tele, and have thought maybe I would try some more vintage "correct" pickups instead, just to play around. I was going to buy a tele with the Fender Alnico III pickups (which get very good reviews), and then found the Jim Weider "Big-T" pickups, made by Lindy Fralin. They also happen to be alnico III, but I like Weider, and Analogman and Fralin who helped design these things, so I figured they would be worth a shot... the few people I have read who bought them seem to LOVE them.

    I'm with Jim on this whole pickup thing- besides the fact that's it's a personal taste/choice, there are SO MANY wonderful pickups out there now, it's mind boggling. It would almost be hard to find a set that "sucked"! lol Find a set you love, and stop looking. :)
  • ruger9,

    You (and Jim) are right, and I'm no equipment hound (I used to be, but it's just distraction now). I'm still always curious about what people choose to use and why. I'm doing this switch out of necessity; the pickups and electronics in the guitar were truly awful, but the guitar itself is really not that bad, so I thought I'd try to make it into the best instrument that it could be without going over the top. I'm sure that I'll be happy with the Nocasters, and I've been impressed with Fender's customer service, so that's not a bad thing.
  • I've had a tele (long time ago) that had Muy Grandes (and a modern bridge). It was FAT sounding... which I did not really dig, in the end. I have a Nocaster bridge pickup in my current tele (Squier CVC), I dig it. It's about right, to my ears. Chose it over Original Vintage (which I also have, but never installed) to get the noiseless middle position. Haven't been searching since... except for a new (=old) amp, but that's another story.
  • Yeah, when I put in the Muy Grande and Texas Special, FAT is what I was after... I wanted the tele to be more of a blues/rock machine, and it is.... but now, many years later, I find myself looking for more vintage-y tones, so I'm either going to get some new pickups, or maybe just a whole new tele :)
Sign In or Register to comment.