Jump to content
Gibson Brands Forums

Old Question, New Replies?


ratty

Recommended Posts

Hi folks,

 

I'm fairly new here and I'm almost certain that this or a similar question has been asked before, but can anyone explain to me the exact difference between an Epiphone Alnico Classic Pro and a Probucker pickup? And, if possible, match them up to their Gibson equivalents.

 

Many thanks in advance.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi folks,

 

I'm fairly new here and I'm almost certain that this or a similar question has been asked before, but can anyone explain to me the exact difference between an Epiphone Alnico Classic Pro and a Probucker pickup? And, if possible, match them up to their Gibson equivalents.

 

Many thanks in advance.

The Probuckers are made with alnico II, the Alnico Classic Pros are made with alnico V and are a little hotter output. I have the Classic Pros in my ES339 and they sound great, and I've owned a '64 Gibson ES335, a '72 Gibson ES330 and a '71 Gibson SG! I'm not going to swap out the Classic Pros, it's simply unnecessary as they have excellent tone.

Both are based off of late '50s Gibson "PAF" pups in, for instance, the Les Pauls of that period. Check them out here:

http://www.epiphone.com/News/Features/2014/The-Sound-of-Innovation.aspx

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The Probuckers are made with alnico II, the Alnico Classic Pros are made with alnico V and are a little hotter output. I have the Classic Pros in my ES339 and they sound great, and I've owned a '64 Gibson ES335, a '72 Gibson ES330 and a '71 Gibson SG! I'm not going to swap out the Classic Pros, it's simply unnecessary as they have excellent tone.

Both are based off of late '50s Gibson "PAF" pups in, for instance, the Les Pauls of that period. Check them out here:

http://www.epiphone.com/News/Features/2014/The-Sound-of-Innovation.aspx

 

Thanks Steve112, that's exactly what I wanted to know. Epiphone seem to weave a web of confusion about their stuff sometimes.

You've had some nice Gibbos in the past! It's encouraging to know that you wouldn't change your Epi pickups for something more Gibson-like.

Again, many thanks.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

×
×
  • Create New...