61 Reissue SG - pickups doing weird things
11My ZVEX Fuzz Factory does the same thing. If I use a guitar w/ a strong pickup, it kind of pukes out. I just turn down the guitar so it doesn't sag as much.
Moderator: Greg
Redline wrote:My ZVEX Fuzz Factory does the same thing. If I use a guitar w/ a strong pickup, it kind of pukes out. I just turn down the guitar so it doesn't sag as much.
Yea I can definitely get rid of most of it by turning the guitar down, and the gain on the pedal down as well, but then I feel like I'm compromising. I had the guitar setup when I first ran into this problem and had the guy set the pickups really low in the body, which also helped, but didn't solve it completely.
I'm starting to think it's ultimately the preamp in the old twin reverb I'm using. If this is the case, what would I need to do to go about fixing it?
tgavin wrote:Yea I can definitely get rid of most of it by turning the guitar down, and the gain on the pedal down as well, but then I feel like I'm compromising. I had the guitar setup when I first ran into this problem and had the guy set the pickups really low in the body, which also helped, but didn't solve it completely.
Okay, I understand that you don't want to deal with setting the guitar volume to a specific lower spot as a rule--that suggestion was just to test what's causing the problem. Same goes for the pickup height questions. If the problem goes away after either of these, then I don't think your pickups are actually faulty.
If there is not actually something broken or in need of adjustment, then the lowered-gain solution is just a practical way of dealing with something you don't like about your gear. Humbuckers always sound "blurrier" to me than single-coils, for example. I also understand how you might want all the distortion the pedal is able to provide, but the side effect of doing this when using your SG is this sagging attack.I'm starting to think it's ultimately the preamp in the old twin reverb I'm using. If this is the case, what would I need to do to go about fixing it?
Well, what makes you suspect the preamp in the Twin? Once your guitar has gone through a distortion box with the gain up, the signal dynamics have been crushed so much that the attack of the signal is at the same level as the sustaining portion. So if the Twin was causing the problem, the amp wouldn't be able to differentiate between the attack and the sustaining signal, which means the problem would be occurring on more than just the attack. That is, unless you have the Rat set for very low gain and very high output, which doesn't seem to be the case.
-Tom
tgavin wrote:It's hard to say why you hear the problem on the Twin and not the HR Deluxe--could be a few things that aren't necessarily flaws. My point about the Twin was that, unless you have the output of the pedal very high up, you're not going to make the twin clip the attack of the signal, especially after the pedal is already doing so. Does the Twin exhibit anything like that problem otherwise--with other pedals, or with none?
As for a failing tube... even hitting the input of the Twin with the loudest signal a pedal will put out, you're not going to hurt the tube in the first stage that way. Usually a failing preamp tube makes intermittent noises, squeals microphonically, or just plain doesn't work. However, it's easy to just replace the 12AX7 and see--even if the current tube is not broken, you might like the sound of a replacement better, and maybe the problem would be less apparent.
-Tom
DodgeBallMinny wrote:Seems like you've checked the guitar (I assume when you had it set up the tech inspected the guts and everything checked out, no?) and you've checked the amp. By process of elimination, I'd say your issue is w/ the RAT, especially as you didn't report the same issue w/ your new fuzz.
I'd get the RAT checked out or just find a new dirt pedal to love.
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