slammintone
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 19, 2001
- Messages
- 2,003
When I got my Throbak SLE-101ltd set back in the fall of 2009 I knew I'd gotten something special. NOS wires, and I'd wanted the set that had the bobbins wound on both vintage machines. When I got them I noticed an improvement over the Burstbuckers in my R7 right away. They were better but I'd also just six weeks before gotten a set of Wolfetone Legends for my R8 and I just always thought the Legend set was hitting all the right PAF buttons while my otherwise excellent Throbak set was reaching towards PAF greatness but ending up sounding a bit like a less refined more modern interpretation of a PAF. I tried swapping each set between my R8 and R7 and quickly swapped them back as the Legend set did even less for my R7 than the Throbaks and the Throbak set didn't quite have the chirping middle position tone on my R8 than the Legend set had. I know, I know BLAH BLAH BLAH get on with the story!....
So about a week ago I got the idea from a thread on this forum to try a magnet swap for my Throbaks, specifically a pair of Jon Gundry's unoriented A5 magnets as are standard in the SLE-101 + Ltd set. Yesterday the magnets arrived from Throbak and I emailed Jon about the correct way to install them to avoid frustration and got my answers. This morning I completed the mag swap and soldered the covers back on (beautiful set of double whites I just saw for the first time. Just excellent) and strung the guitar back up and did a rough pickup height setup. Plugging in and firing the JCM800 2204 up I threw the standby and started playing a bit and WOW what an improvement. This was not subtle! I sort of hoped to brighten things up a bit because my R7 is on the dark side of neutral. Well, what I got was a total transformation from (in comparison) a rather blah and somewhat soft and murky PAF imitation to what I'd call as spot on PAF tone and character as I've heard yet. The bridge pickup woke right up with a vowelly honkin midrange, a spankin' woody and bloomin low end and a nice sparkle on the high end with a 3D presence and just this wide palate of tonal colors it was completely lacking before. Truth be told I think both pickups got a bit louder with the magnet swap. After I played with the polepieces on the neck pickup it had much of the same sonic wonders happen to it. Gorgeous woody low end bloom, a very sweet and clear middle range and another bit of sparkle on the high notes. Very organic. The middle position has got to be the best I've ever heard on a guitar I've played. The end result? I couldn't hardly put the guitar down for two hours straight. And this is the guitar that usually gets the most time sitting on the stand while I play my R9. Oh yeah, my poor R9! Once my favorite with it's stock burstbuckers, ha! Those pickups sound so compressed and generic compared to the Throbaks it almost a joke. I'll put it like this, if I would have sent the pickups to Jon to swap out the mags for me and got the same set back with the A5 mags I would strongly have suspected he just tossed me a whole new set of pickups because the change has been that huge. Should have done this two years ago!!:##
So about a week ago I got the idea from a thread on this forum to try a magnet swap for my Throbaks, specifically a pair of Jon Gundry's unoriented A5 magnets as are standard in the SLE-101 + Ltd set. Yesterday the magnets arrived from Throbak and I emailed Jon about the correct way to install them to avoid frustration and got my answers. This morning I completed the mag swap and soldered the covers back on (beautiful set of double whites I just saw for the first time. Just excellent) and strung the guitar back up and did a rough pickup height setup. Plugging in and firing the JCM800 2204 up I threw the standby and started playing a bit and WOW what an improvement. This was not subtle! I sort of hoped to brighten things up a bit because my R7 is on the dark side of neutral. Well, what I got was a total transformation from (in comparison) a rather blah and somewhat soft and murky PAF imitation to what I'd call as spot on PAF tone and character as I've heard yet. The bridge pickup woke right up with a vowelly honkin midrange, a spankin' woody and bloomin low end and a nice sparkle on the high end with a 3D presence and just this wide palate of tonal colors it was completely lacking before. Truth be told I think both pickups got a bit louder with the magnet swap. After I played with the polepieces on the neck pickup it had much of the same sonic wonders happen to it. Gorgeous woody low end bloom, a very sweet and clear middle range and another bit of sparkle on the high notes. Very organic. The middle position has got to be the best I've ever heard on a guitar I've played. The end result? I couldn't hardly put the guitar down for two hours straight. And this is the guitar that usually gets the most time sitting on the stand while I play my R9. Oh yeah, my poor R9! Once my favorite with it's stock burstbuckers, ha! Those pickups sound so compressed and generic compared to the Throbaks it almost a joke. I'll put it like this, if I would have sent the pickups to Jon to swap out the mags for me and got the same set back with the A5 mags I would strongly have suspected he just tossed me a whole new set of pickups because the change has been that huge. Should have done this two years ago!!:##