PunkKitty
Horny bag of electric meat
I'm amazed at the tonal difference that pickup height makes. I installed a custom wound alnico 2 pickup in my First Act Sheena the other day. The tone sounded good, but kinda iffy. I was thinking of replacing it. Or maybe testing different caps with it. (I used a .022 mustard cap).
Today I learned the Bill Lawrence method for adjusting pickup height. HOLY CRAP! What a difference. That pickup doesn't sound good, it sounds GREAT!
For those that don't know the Bill Lawrence method, I'll shamelessly steal a quote from wildepickups.com
Today I learned the Bill Lawrence method for adjusting pickup height. HOLY CRAP! What a difference. That pickup doesn't sound good, it sounds GREAT!
For those that don't know the Bill Lawrence method, I'll shamelessly steal a quote from wildepickups.com
07/21/10
Height Adjustment
One of the most important and overlooked fine tuning methods is height adjustment of the pickups. When people bring their guitars to Bill, one of the first things he will do is adjust the height.
Following Bill's famous nickel method for height adjustment of your pickups can be a simple and effective point to achieve the tone your looking for.
The distance between pickup and string is a very important factor for output and sound.
As a general rule for the bridge pickup - put a nickel on top of the pickup under the high E string and play the highest note on that string. Adjust the height on that side of the pickup till the string touches the nickel. Repeat the same with the low E string, but use two nickels on top of each other. If this gives you too much output, you can reduce the height slightly. Don't forget that twice the distance will reduce the output by about 60%, and the sound will lose some lows. NOW, you can adjust the neck pickup to match the output of the bridge pickup. For the sound test, use stage volume.