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franko5150

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I have a question about the change from nickel to stainless steel frets some years back. Since the Axis was based on the EVH Signature guitar with minor changes and I believe uses the same pickups as the original, I'm wondering how that has affected the tone on the Axis since stainless steel frets tend to be a tad 'brighter' or more trebly than nickel frets. I know the pickups are proprietary to the Axis/EVH in that they were EQ'd to the specific wood, neck wood, etc of the guitar at the time. I was curious as to how the change in the frets affects the sound since there is an audible/sonic difference. I'm sure someone here has both an EVH Signature & and Axis for comparison.
I never did pull the trigger on an EBMM, but I'm looking to do that within the next 3 months going with an Axis (hopefully a Macha green one).
 

DrKev

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I know the pickups are proprietary to the Axis/EVH in that they were EQ'd to the specific wood, neck wood, etc of the guitar at the time.
I just read about this yesterday! As Larry DiMarzio and Steve Blucher and tell it, Ed wanted something like his favorite Seymour Duncan JB humbucker in his favorite striped guitar, but that had a damaged coil which changed the sound a little versus a stock JB. That became the benchmark for the bridge pickup design. In the end there were two different but similar bridge pickups EVH was considering for the guitar, but Ed couldn't decide which he liked best so Steve Lukather made the decision. (The other pickup was later released by DiMarzio as the Tone Zone).

I was curious as to how the change in the frets affects the sound since there is an audible/sonic difference. I'm sure someone here has both an EVH Signature & and Axis for comparison.
Re: stainless frets, the best demonstration I've seen was done by Warmoth, they did a blind test with two necks on the same body, you'll find it on their youtube channel. The difference is very small and sometimes completely inaudible. If it's real and not due to the different performance or different neck, it's certainly no bigger than differences we'd expect between two guitars off the same production line (because no two pieces of wood are the same and there is always variance in the pickup and pot values). In terms of buying decisions longevity of stainless is a plus and they always feel great without regular polishing. When my clients/guitar students ask me I tell them that and to forget about 'tone' considerations.
 
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