Origin of the Voodoo TE-59 Pickup
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The guitar looked a mess, but when I plugged it in, it sounded incredible. I was impressed. With raised pole pieces on the D- and G- strings, the pickup was one of the most even-balanced that I had ever heard. There was no boomy low E-string and no ice pick high end. As I started to tear the guitar apart, I realized the solder joints had never been broken. It wasn’t a replacement, but a bone stock pickup!
The Prototype
I called and asked if he offered a similar pickup that I could use for my guitars. He didn’t, but he wanted to take a crack at creating one. I sent him pictures and every measurement possible.
In a couple of weeks, Peter sent me several prototypes to try and to compare with the pickup in Brad’s guitar. After a couple of tweaks, he sent a pickup that was dead on with the Telecaster’s. The Voodoo TE-59 was born, and Peter has been producing this version exclusively for my guitars ever since.
The Sound
Peter’s TE-59 has the same evenness as the Telecaster pickup. The pickup retains the same tone and clarity no matter what output that Peter has wound: lower output for a thin vintage sound, hot for an edgy sound, or over-wound for a rock/blues sound. It has become my favorite go-to pickup, and I have used them in several of Brad’s guitars. If you want a pickup that produces a very in-your-face and bold sound, the TE-59 is a good choice.
TE-LONGNECK -After many years I came up with this pickup. It has slightly longer magnets and a special scatter wind pattern ,it is a great match for any of the bridge pickups. With the Longneck pickup the notes are more defined making the pickup very usable in the neck position.
8.4k bridge/8.2 neck
opened box to take pix of the slot top
Posted on by
The guitar looked a mess, but when I plugged it in, it sounded incredible. I was impressed. With raised pole pieces on the D- and G- strings, the pickup was one of the most even-balanced that I had ever heard. There was no boomy low E-string and no ice pick high end. As I started to tear the guitar apart, I realized the solder joints had never been broken. It wasn’t a replacement, but a bone stock pickup!
The Prototype
I called and asked if he offered a similar pickup that I could use for my guitars. He didn’t, but he wanted to take a crack at creating one. I sent him pictures and every measurement possible.
In a couple of weeks, Peter sent me several prototypes to try and to compare with the pickup in Brad’s guitar. After a couple of tweaks, he sent a pickup that was dead on with the Telecaster’s. The Voodoo TE-59 was born, and Peter has been producing this version exclusively for my guitars ever since.
The Sound
Peter’s TE-59 has the same evenness as the Telecaster pickup. The pickup retains the same tone and clarity no matter what output that Peter has wound: lower output for a thin vintage sound, hot for an edgy sound, or over-wound for a rock/blues sound. It has become my favorite go-to pickup, and I have used them in several of Brad’s guitars. If you want a pickup that produces a very in-your-face and bold sound, the TE-59 is a good choice.
TE-LONGNECK -After many years I came up with this pickup. It has slightly longer magnets and a special scatter wind pattern ,it is a great match for any of the bridge pickups. With the Longneck pickup the notes are more defined making the pickup very usable in the neck position.
8.4k bridge/8.2 neck
opened box to take pix of the slot top
This item is sold As-Described
This item is sold As-Described and cannot be returned unless it arrives in a condition different from how it was described or photographed. Items must be returned in original, as-shipped condition with all original packaging.Learn More.
| Listed | 9 years ago |
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| Condition | Mint (Used) Mint items are in essentially new original condition but have been opened or played.Learn more |
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