Springywheel Posted Thursday at 17:29 Posted Thursday at 17:29 (edited) I hear these two are quite similar - my new classic vibe has SDs, but I'm just wondering were if it'd be worth me upgrading to the Gzrs for recording heavy rock/proto heavy metal tones, or should I save my money and stick to the SPB1s? Apparently the only difference between these and the Gzrs is that the latter has a bit more of an upper mid push....just wondering if I can just tweak the amp/od pedal EQ, or would it not be the same? Edited Thursday at 17:31 by Springywheel Quote
Doctor J Posted Thursday at 17:32 Posted Thursday at 17:32 What do you feel the current pickups are missing? Quote
JJMotown Posted Thursday at 18:11 Posted Thursday at 18:11 39 minutes ago, Springywheel said: I hear these two are quite similar Nope, plus the gzrs have there own electrics. Quote
Springywheel Posted Thursday at 21:35 Author Posted Thursday at 21:35 4 hours ago, Doctor J said: What do you feel the current pickups are missing? Bit of growl I guess? Quote
Lozz196 Posted Thursday at 22:01 Posted Thursday at 22:01 I found the SPB1 to lack overall clarity in the mix, had a nice warm bassy sound but def a sit low sound. Not had a GZR but have tried them and yes, there is the upper mid push to them. I’d try boosting somewhere between 1kHz and 2kHz if your gear has that, if at that point you’re still not getting what you want then I’d try the GZR. 1 1 Quote
Sean Posted yesterday at 07:25 Posted yesterday at 07:25 That'll sort it. Probably double the cost of the pickups but... Quote
bloke_zero Posted yesterday at 09:35 Posted yesterday at 09:35 I like the geezers, yes, upper mid push, tighter bottom end. They sound quite 70's to me in a good way. I don't think EQ will get you the same thing, but it might get you into the right space. Like @Lozz196 says - worth a try first! Quote
HeadlessBassist Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago Before you start major plumbing adventures changing pickups, did you change the strings yet? I only ask, as the original OEM Fender strings are always terrible. First port of call for me on any new bass (new or used) is to slap on a set of Elixirs. The tone, response and sustain always changes significantly. Just a thought Quote
Springywheel Posted 7 hours ago Author Posted 7 hours ago 1 hour ago, HeadlessBassist said: Before you start major plumbing adventures changing pickups, did you change the strings yet? I only ask, as the original OEM Fender strings are always terrible. First port of call for me on any new bass (new or used) is to slap on a set of Elixirs. The tone, response and sustain always changes significantly. Just a thought I have actually and it's made a huge difference. It had ancient flatwounds on there. Still curious about the geezers though 1 Quote
Misdee Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago (edited) I think changing from the SD to the GZR would be a bit of a sideways move, and not the best use of money in terms of upgrading the overall bass playing experience. The GZR is a superb pickup, but the SD is just as good as the EMG, albeit with a slightly different flavour. My own personal experience has been that changing pickups can be a big upgrade if you have been using a pickup the is genuinely defective or obviously deficient in some way, but swapping one perfectly good high-end pickup for another because of notional sonic differences that you have read about is usually a disappointing waste of money. If someone is getting a custom Fodera I can understand exploring the nuances of choosing the exact right pickup, butI really don't think a Squire Classic Vibe bass warrants spending that amount of money to explore the subtleties of two high quality replacement pickups. If you've got a Seymour Duncan in there that's already a big upgrade. My advice would be experiment with strings and EQ and try and appreciate the character of the sound as it is. Edited 30 minutes ago by Misdee 3 Quote
PaulThePlug Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago (edited) SD and Passive. What value pots and particularly capacitor 0.1u, 0.47u? Couple of quid on a Cap swap Edited 3 hours ago by PaulThePlug Quote
Springywheel Posted 2 hours ago Author Posted 2 hours ago (edited) 2 hours ago, Misdee said: I think changing from the SD to the GZR would be a bit of a sideways move, and not the best use of money in terms of upgrading the overall bass playing experience. The GZR is a superb pickup, but the SD is just as good as the EMG, albeit with a slightly different flavour. My own personal experience has been that changing pickups can be a big upgrade if you have been using a pickup the is genuinely defective or obviously deficient in some way, but swapping one perfectly good high-end pickup for another because of notional sonic differences that you have read about is usually a disappointing waste of money. If someone is getting a custom Fodera I can understand exploring the nuances of choosing the exact right pickup, butI really don't think a Squire Classic Vibe bass warrants spending that amount of money to explore the nuances between two high quality replacement pickups. If you've got a Seymour Duncan in there that's already a big upgrade. My advice would be experiment with strings and EQ and try and appreciate the character of the sound as it is. I think you could be right.... I have been tweaking my setup today and I'm a lot happier with how everything is sounding, particularly through a dirt pedal. Edited 2 hours ago by Springywheel Quote
Supernaut Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago On 19/06/2025 at 18:29, Springywheel said: I hear these two are quite similar - my new classic vibe has SDs, but I'm just wondering were if it'd be worth me upgrading to the Gzrs for recording heavy rock/proto heavy metal tones, or should I save my money and stick to the SPB1s? Apparently the only difference between these and the Gzrs is that the latter has a bit more of an upper mid push....just wondering if I can just tweak the amp/od pedal EQ, or would it not be the same? How about these? Quote
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