Butch Snyder
Well-known member
A lot of folks say the Morse doesn't quack. Some folks say it doesn't quack like a vintage Strat (I don't really think anything does; even newer Strats). Anyway, I have found a couple of very usable tones from my Morse. Keep in mind that that's in addition to the already huge amount of achievable tones. Even though I have replaced the stock pickups, vol/tone pots, and cap, the result holds true for any stock Morse. I've used these tones with my Morse when it was stock.
The first quack tone is a nice clean or dirty rhythm and really cool arpeggios. The 2-way toggle is down. The 3-way blade is all the forward. The 3-way toggle is in the middle position. You get the bridge pickup and both single coils.
The second is basically the 2-way toggle up, the 3-way blade in pos. 1, and the 3-way toggle in the middle. You're getting the bridge and slanted single coil. To my ears, it's a lot like Albert Lee's #2 position quack.
The main difference here, is the height of the pickups. My Morse came with the pickups set fairly low. I kept the singles at the stock height and raised the humbuckers up a tad. That made a nice difference.
This may or may not be anything new for anyone here. To me it was a nice discovery.
The first quack tone is a nice clean or dirty rhythm and really cool arpeggios. The 2-way toggle is down. The 3-way blade is all the forward. The 3-way toggle is in the middle position. You get the bridge pickup and both single coils.
The second is basically the 2-way toggle up, the 3-way blade in pos. 1, and the 3-way toggle in the middle. You're getting the bridge and slanted single coil. To my ears, it's a lot like Albert Lee's #2 position quack.
The main difference here, is the height of the pickups. My Morse came with the pickups set fairly low. I kept the singles at the stock height and raised the humbuckers up a tad. That made a nice difference.
This may or may not be anything new for anyone here. To me it was a nice discovery.