Product details
BurstBucker pickups from Gibson Gear now give guitarists a choice of three
replica sounds from Gibson's original "Patent Applied For" pickups - the pickups
that give the '59 Les Paul Standard its legendary sound. The three BurstBuckers
- all with unpolished magnets and non-potted coils, like the originals -
represent the variations found among vintage Gibson humbuckers.
The initial demand for Patent Applied For replica pickups came from Japanese
collectors, and the the BurstBucker was offered exclusively in Japan beginning
in 1996. By 1999 word has spread of the unique replica tones produced by
BurstBuckers. Gibson USA put the first BurstBuckers on a production model with
the Gary Moore Signature Les Paul in the Summer of 2000, and Gibson's Custom
division then equipped the Class 5 Les Paul, Custom Authentic '68 Les Paul
Custom and Custom Authentic '58 Les Paul Standard models with BurstBuckers.
The variations in pickup output and tone came from inconsistencies in winding
the bobbins, a result of the lack of automatic shutoffs on Gibson's winding
machines in the late 1950s. Seth Lover, who invented the humbucker, always said
they wound the bobbins "until they were full," and original examples suggest
that employees stopped the winding machines after the counter reached
approximately 5000 turns. When the two coils in a pickup have a different number
of turns, that variation puts a little "edge" or "bite" on the classic humbucker
sound. That's the sound BurstBuckers replicate. (The "creamy" sound that
Gibson's '57 Classics replicate comes from equal coil windings.) Gibson then
carries the replication process two steps farther, with unpolished Alnico II
magnets and no wax-potting of the coils, just like the originals.
(IM57A-NH) is slightly underwound, with medium "vintage" output, and works
well in both bridge and neck positions.