Gibson s engineers recommend a 1 6 millimeter distance between the strings and the pickups for the bridge pickup and 2 4 millimeters for the neck pickup.
Gibson electric guitar pickup height.
It s a great help to use a capo on the top fret so you don t have to press the strings.
Gibson s calibrated t type humbucking pickups are paired with our hand wired control assembly.
Crank em high and let em fry might sum up some players attitudes toward pickup height adjustment.
The result is that.
Bridge pickup should be 3 64 i think the 3 64 is a typo it should be 3 32 neck pickup should be 4 32.
Humbuckers can run a little closer to the strings gibson recommends 1 16th of an inch for the bridge pickup and 3 32nds of an inch for the neck because their magnets aren t as powerful as single coils.
Fret low e at 22nd fret and measure pickup height from underside of string to point on pickup closest to string.
Any adjustment of pickup height in two pickup guitars needs to give some consideration to balancing the output between the bridge and neck pickups too.
From its inaugural appearance in 1958 the gibson es 335 set an unmatched standard.
Tune your guitar and place it on a table or a workbench with a towel or blanket underneath we measure pickup height from the top of the pickup to the bottom of the string while the string is pressed against the highest fret photo 1.
But there s a lot more to it than that and many guitarists will just as often prefer the sound of their electric guitars with the pickups lowered slightly rather than raised higher.
The gibson es 335 dot is the cornerstone of the gibson es line up.
Fender for instance suggests 6 64ths to 4 64ths for their standard single coil pickups.
Fret high e at 22nd fret distance for both pickups should be 3 32.
Your magnetic field floats above the pickup and if your strings are out of the field you won t get a rich full tone.
The pearloid dot inlay rosewood fingerboard on a hand rolled rounded c mahogany neck remind players where it all started.
Setting your pickup height too low would cause your pickup not to be optimized for your guitar.
In the 1950s it was 1 6 millimeters for both pickups which may have reflected the lower output unpotted standard of the day.